These are the video's that show the valuable patience of Gina. Following Al around the woods, getting amazing shots, being left behind as Al explores. Always appreciate the value of the camera work and the editing to put everything together.
My husband and I agree. We have always enjoyed the daily life videos. And they could be done without Olivia on camera. I’m sure that many viewers are interested in the building skills, but we hope for a little more variety in the videos. 🥰😊
My grandfather did mineing in Washington and people that got rid of beavers would ask him to blow dams and the homes to denture them longer. He did alot of TNT work.
Al that is not a Moose antler shed, but a shoulder blade bone. That Standing ridge on the one side and the cupped socket says it is a shoulder blade bone.
That shoulder bone is one which is often used to mimic the sounds of moose antlers of bull moose during hunting season. It's possible that a hunter left it there. If someone is used to hunting there, they may be back without you being aware. They rake that bone across the Alders to attract male moose to come and fight over moose cows.
A&G, the thing I noticed in this video is that when all is quiet, all is quiet!!! No planes, trains, or automobiles! We live in the flight path of SEA-TAC airport. Though we have just shy of 2 ac we have constant noise each day. Luckily, at night, it’s calm but for the occasional siren or three! 😢 I know you all see your blessings each day, I encourage you to admire it, without fail. Thank you for the show today. Although it’s noisy, it’s ours and we love it. We are so fortunate to have our neighbor-noise to a minimum. We are blessed, too!
i used to live 5 km from toronto internation airport and when i first move in i heard the planes all the time about a year in i didnt hear them but friends would come over and say how can you not hear i guess i blocked it out lol hugssssss from Canada
I hope you have bought some mb650 for the foot catches on a drowning rig for the beaver if not go to Minnesota trap line and get you a half dozen of them. You will need to dig out the dam brake deeper. Good luck with the beaver battle.
My first experience with beavers in Tennessee, I saw a branch in the road and as i got closer, it began to move. It was a large beaver dragging it across the road. We nipped those things in the bud quickly. The park close to us had to wrap metal fencing material around the trees to keep them from chewing them. I’m definitely anti beaver.
Goooooood mooooorning AL, Gina and Olivia fellow viewers and all my friends Hoodie from Jamaica 🇯🇲. How are you guys all doing, hopefully having a great weekend
Hello, Gina and Al. I found it satisfying watching the new excavator being used to remove tree stumps on your homestead. What's the next major project that requires it?
I had no idea the amount of work it takes to find out where the beaver are living and working. I was wondering about getting more traps 🤩 Great camera work Gina! This is one very interesting video!
As a Canadian, I've got to say sorry! It's just how we roll. But seriously, I can't believe the mess those beavers have made up there. It’s wild how much damage they've done in such a short time. Just crazy! I hope you’ve seen some results from the traps by now.
It's unfortunate that the pesky beaver have returned, but it was great to see the wilder, wooded parts of the homestead again. Your property is so beautiful. Thanks for taking us along. Good luck in your battle against the beaver!
Sorry to hear the beavers are working where you don't want them. We have a 20 acre meadow at the base of our ridge that is now a swampy pond. Good for wlldlife and for those who trek the rail trail. Very scenic. There is a major brook running through, so we let it take its course. There are culverts on the trial to keep it dry. Back in the day that meadow was hayed, but not relevant to our main crop. Good luck in redirecting them. Not an easy job.
Do you intend to cut up the down timber for firewood? It seems like a great opportunity. The beavers have cut it down for you all you need to do is make logs and cart them home and feed that hungry boiler!!
Good Morning Lumnah Acres & friends hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving with family and friends make those memories & traditions and the beavers are back with a vengeance Al hope you get them before they destroy the property and be safe out there when looking ❤
Good morning, Al. I think you need to construct a trail in there with your excavator. If you could get it near any of those dams, it would break them up immediately.
I was thinking that also. It seems pretty far away frim the homestead. I would assume Al would have to wait until some ground is frozen to drive iut that far. I kniw VERY little about excavatiors, I'm just speculating!
G’day 😊 what a great day for a walk in the woods 👍 oh no, those pesky beavers are back! Guess it’s Just in time for winter for you to make some warm gloves and a hat for winter 😉
Good morning 🌞 Al and Gina, the bone you found looks more like a shoulder blade bone than an antler. I really like watching you walking through the more wilderness area of your property. It’s such a beautiful property you have, blessings to you and your family, stay safe and have a wonderful day. A little late, but Happy Thanksgiving 🦃🍁🍽 we hope you had a wonderful day with family 👍💪🙌🙏🌈✌️🐽🐷🐖
I am a true animal lover but I have seen the damage both beaver and wild hogs can do to property. Good luck stopping them from further damage. You have such a beautiful piece of property. Thanks for sharing it with us.
Reintroducing beavers into the wild was something hailed as ...good for the wildlife and natural eco systems. Was the damage seen by you actually bad for the forest area...or was it perceived as damage to the homesteaders use of the forest? I'm not trying to be disagreeable...I'm just trying to understand better....and put things in perspective.
@@kooskool yes and no, the areas they keep damning up cause critical roads and trails to flood out that will eventually damage the main part of the homestead. If they go to a area that they don't use and will not damage critical well used area's he may not bother with them, but they do a lot of damage you can not deny that.
@@tinamincheski2195 a lot of the answers you are looking for will be answered according to the use of the property. I grew up on a 315 acre farm. Beavers moved in . Dad showed me the areas affected stating we needed to move them from the areas our cattle grazed and allowed them free range in another area that would not interfere with the safety of humans or the livestock. Knowing they were on the property meant we needed to monitor their activity and take further action if needed. Hopefully this helps you understand better. Thanks for bringing up a 60 year old memory. Take care.
A study was done using the sound of running water to trick the beavers into blocking a leak and this was used to control where the beaver dams were built.
Al, remove all the beavers you can before winter sets in and clear out the dam down to the original depth. Remove the huts later this winter and then in the spring set your traps again because 2 year old kits will be moving in. Beavers destroy land, trees and water.
Know you left the canvas tent up and it is moldy... Vinegar water to kill spray it ..off it slowly . ( Put it away every year dry in the shop hang up a good size center pole and rope it off wall ones . Pulley for center up to the ceiling
Normally you might be able to sic your dog on the beavers to drive them away, but with Brutus I would be afraid of him accompanying the beavers back to the pasture area to meet the rest of the homestead livestock. 😁
And hence the term " busy as beavers" so great to see your property up close and beautiful. Thank you so for sharing, great video for after thanksgiving viewing.
Al: Depending on the type of water body they occupy, beavers will construct freestanding lodges or will excavate burrows known as bank dens. Lodges and dens are used for safety, and a place to rest, stay warm, give birth, and raise young. Lodges and dens are not subsurface, and have enough air exchange to allow beaver, muskrats, and other air breathing fish and wildlife to breathe while conditions are otherwise limiting. Freestanding lodges are built in areas where the bank or water levels aren’t sufficient for a safe bank den. Lodges consist of a mound of branches and logs, plastered with mud. One or more underwater openings and tunnels lead to center of the mound, where a single chamber is created. Bank dens are dug into the banks of streams and large ponds, and in some sites a lodge may be built over the den. Bank dens may also be located under stumps, logs or docks. Beavers living in cold climates store branches of food trees and shrubs for winter use by shoving them into the mud at the bottom of ponds or streams near the entrance to their bank den or lodge, or may create a floating cache anchored by its own weight or large branches at the top of the cache frozen in ice or otherwise anchored. This latter cache type appears to be most common in larger rivers and other areas with rocky substrate.
Unfortunately you need to take care of the mold issue on the tent before you use it again it would not be healthy to be inside and breathe the mold. It would have been good to do that when the weather was warmer.
Beaver do not cut trees to waste, but they will drag the small tops to build first and wait for the water to rise so they can float the large stuff later rather than drag it. It is a lot easier to float it and act as tug boat rather than bulldozer on the ground getting hung up on brush and other trees. It really is amazing how they know the future water levels without all the tools we use. The engineering skills they have are an amazing thing to behold. But yeah, land owners cannot afford to let them destroy their forests.
@@kooskool No he is protecting his cattle operation from disease. Beaver fever is spread through the water downstream. It does not impact them, but it does cattle. The beavers are just carriers and spreaders.
Hey Al and Gina, is there any way that you can get to the dams with your excavator without it getting stuck, to open gaps to start draining the water. Once drained would it then be useful to remove all beaver dens and debris? Hey I’m an Aussie so we don’t have beavers here. Man they certainly are destructive.
as Al mentioned, some of these dams are a 1/4 mile hike from where he can drive the 4x4 so at least 1/2 mile from the house. That's too far for driving heavy equipment without excess wear. OTOH, some of these may be cleared via a grappling hook using the winch on the 4x4. They can also be blown apart with explosives. (easier to carry)
Al what you called a wasp nest was a hornets nest . Hornets are more aggressive than wasp when prevoked . I'm glad that you didn't get stung I don't think that one was in use .
Good Saturday afternoon New Yolk🥚City .... your moose antler looks like a scapula? Tha's a real mess back in the swamp .... it will be interesting to see if you are able to catch the🦫🦫🦫🦫🦫🦫 Take care AL, Gina & Olivia .... have a nice day 🦫🌲🍁🍂
Good video today, it was refreshing to you do something different - other than to build something or buy something. Good luck on those beavers, not sure if I missed an update on that moose that was in the pond. Take Care!
I think that bone you found is a scapula/shoulder blade. I have one just like it from elk from this year hunting... good luck with those beavers, they are relentless but fun to trap!
Good morning y'all the Beavers are tearing it up again. I know Al get them sooner or later hopefully sooner then later. I know you said you ordered something, but you definitely need hiking gear.
Good morning Al Gina and Olivia hope y'all have a blessed day together and you all had a great thanksgiving together with Gina's parents. You guys are a blessing to so many people
Thanks for sharing the video. I enjoyed doing things like that myself. Walking in the woods finding different things.Moose antlers deer antlers. Or just taking a walk in the woods.
Al to day the hoof GP came out with a video, and it up front showed a really good raceway you should see. For your work station for going into and out of. You could do it in wood as well. Thumbs up 👍
Glad to see you carrying a rifle, have been concerned for your safety on some of your ventures into the woods with all of the big creatures in your area.
This reminds me of the day a man in our neighborhood tried dynamite on his pond/lake. It's approximately 3 to 5 miles away as the crow flies. His plan worked maybe too well😮 when all was said and done. He caused two roads to wash out. The force was so strong it flooded my small stream and the road was gone around the culvert.😅😂 we still laugh 30 years later. Beavers can do some damage but this man did more😮 Thanks for sharing. Gina you do great job on thes nature 😊videos
Totally off topic for today's video, but when you showed where the beavers were eating the maple trees, it reminded me of a question. Are you collecting sap from the maple trees on your new property to make Maple Syrup? We enjoy your videos!
Good morning i wonder if beavers ever get tooth aches,and how quick they can take down one of those bigger trees.hopefully you can get them pretty quick.lots of firewood you can cut❤
I arranged for New Hampshire fish and game to relocate two breeding pairs of beavers onto the farm i worked at on Canterbury. They formed two ponds and made the marsh land into a small 8-acre lake. Before the beaver, the land was useless. Once they built their dams, we had much more usable land.
That is a scapula (shoulder blade) from a moose. An antler would be even thicker and a lot heavier. I bet you've watched David Ellis (Yawt Yawt). He would also set a trap on the entrance of the beaver lodge. Poking a long stick around it, to find the deep entryways, and setting a trap there. I don't know how deep it is there though. Lol. If you catch one, dare Gina to try beaver stew. It literally tastes like roast beef! It's actually quite good in the crockpot! Lol.
Use code LUMNAH130 to get $130 off across your first 4 boxes of Good Chop at bit.ly/3zY1SED!
These are the video's that show the valuable patience of Gina. Following Al around the woods, getting amazing shots, being left behind as Al explores. Always appreciate the value of the camera work and the editing to put everything together.
I have to say, I love Gina's camara skills. I enjoyed this video so much. Hugs and Prayers Ya'll
Both Gina and Olivia do great camera work.
Enjoy these videos much more than the building videos. I get tired of them and fast forward thru them, but sticking to this one to the end!!!
My husband and I agree. We have always enjoyed the daily life videos. And they could be done without Olivia on camera. I’m sure that many viewers are interested in the building skills, but we hope for a little more variety in the videos. 🥰😊
That’s a bone, a scapula, not an antler.
My grandfather did mineing in Washington and people that got rid of beavers would ask him to blow dams and the homes to denture them longer. He did alot of TNT work.
Good news Al, there are 10 natural predators of beavers. Chances are you already know of some on your property.
Al that is not a Moose antler shed, but a shoulder blade bone. That Standing ridge on the one side and the cupped socket says it is a shoulder blade bone.
Exactly Correct. I believe it is called a scapula.
@ medical terms yes, meat packing terms shoulder blade bone.
LOL
Came to say the same thing.
Came to say the same thing.
That shoulder bone is one which is often used to mimic the sounds of moose antlers of bull moose during hunting season. It's possible that a hunter left it there. If someone is used to hunting there, they may be back without you being aware. They rake that bone across the Alders to attract male moose to come and fight over moose cows.
Good morning Al, Gina, and viewers. I hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving and happy holidays to you all
Good morning, Richard - Thank you and happy holidays to you and yours as well!
Congratulations to Gina for her bravery and skill following you into those areas and filming everything and you so expertly.
Well done Gina.
A&G, the thing I noticed in this video is that when all is quiet, all is quiet!!! No planes, trains, or automobiles! We live in the flight path of SEA-TAC airport. Though we have just shy of 2 ac we have constant noise each day. Luckily, at night, it’s calm but for the occasional siren or three! 😢 I know you all see your blessings each day, I encourage you to admire it, without fail. Thank you for the show today. Although it’s noisy, it’s ours and we love it. We are so fortunate to have our neighbor-noise to a minimum. We are blessed, too!
i used to live 5 km from toronto internation airport and when i first move in i heard the planes all the time about a year in i didnt hear them but friends would come over and say how can you not hear i guess i blocked it out lol hugssssss from Canada
I hope you have bought some mb650 for the foot catches on a drowning rig for the beaver if not go to Minnesota trap line and get you a half dozen of them. You will need to dig out the dam brake deeper. Good luck with the beaver battle.
My first experience with beavers in Tennessee, I saw a branch in the road and as i got closer, it began to move. It was a large beaver dragging it across the road. We nipped those things in the bud quickly. The park close to us had to wrap metal fencing material around the trees to keep them from chewing them. I’m definitely anti beaver.
Goooooood mooooorning AL, Gina and Olivia fellow viewers and all my friends Hoodie from Jamaica 🇯🇲. How are you guys all doing, hopefully having a great weekend
Good morning Lloyd! 👍🏾🤩🐶
Goooooooood Morning Lloyd.
Good morning, Lloydman!
Good morning, we are cold 13°.
All is WELL.
ENJOY your warm weekend❤🙏
Hello, Gina and Al. I found it satisfying watching the new excavator being used to remove tree stumps on your homestead. What's the next major project that requires it?
Goooooooood Morning Brian. A lot of that depends on our weather.
Removal of beaver dams
I had no idea the amount of work it takes to find out where the beaver are living and working. I was wondering about getting more traps 🤩 Great camera work Gina! This is one very interesting video!
As a Canadian, I've got to say sorry! It's just how we roll. But seriously, I can't believe the mess those beavers have made up there. It’s wild how much damage they've done in such a short time. Just crazy! I hope you’ve seen some results from the traps by now.
i am one that hates seeing the beavers trapped but i do understand it.
In Their case it's going to be Al and Gina or the Beavers, their choice. get a Professional trapper at once.
I feel akin to Gina because in my younger years I spent many hours trudging behind my husband on our 160 acres.
It's unfortunate that the pesky beaver have returned, but it was great to see the wilder, wooded parts of the homestead again. Your property is so beautiful. Thanks for taking us along. Good luck in your battle against the beaver!
Pesky beamer? Try to enjoy wildlife
Morning to you all... I slept so good last night I nearly missed the video 😊
Goooooooood Morning Sassi. Glad you got a good nights rest
Good morning, Sassi - same with me!
Sorry to hear the beavers are working where you don't want them. We have a 20 acre meadow at the base of our ridge that is now a swampy pond. Good for wlldlife and for those who trek the rail trail. Very scenic. There is a major brook running through, so we let it take its course. There are culverts on the trial to keep it dry. Back in the day that meadow was hayed, but not relevant to our main crop. Good luck in redirecting them. Not an easy job.
A very warm welcome from Gatwick wishing everyone a happy and peaceful weekend 🎉🎉and
Goooooooood Morning Gatwick
Good morning, Jim!
Don't say your were "skunked" in your beaver quest unless you want to catch one of them very smelly "beaver".
Do you intend to cut up the down timber for firewood? It seems like a great opportunity. The beavers have cut it down for you all you need to do is make logs and cart them home and feed that hungry boiler!!
Beavers cut small trees,not good firewood at all for time spent on it.
Good Morning Lumnah Acres & friends hope everyone had a great Thanksgiving with family and friends make those memories & traditions and the beavers are back with a vengeance Al hope you get them before they destroy the property and be safe out there when looking ❤
Good morning, Al. I think you need to construct a trail in there with your excavator. If you could get it near any of those dams, it would break them up immediately.
Goooooooood Morning
I was thinking that also. It seems pretty far away frim the homestead. I would assume Al would have to wait until some ground is frozen to drive iut that far. I kniw VERY little about excavatiors, I'm just speculating!
Hello from Hillsboro, Kentucky. Have a wonderful day!😊
G’day 😊 what a great day for a walk in the woods 👍 oh no, those pesky beavers are back! Guess it’s Just in time for winter for you to make some warm gloves and a hat for winter 😉
I nice pair of mittens and hats would be nice
Good morning, Agnes! I had a wonderful pair of super-warm mitts once for skiing but they were stolen. Grrr!
@@samvalentine3206 G’day Sam 😊 ah that’s sucky 😢 hope you can find a new pair again
Time for some Tannerite? You might also consider a large caliber revolver so you don’t need to burden yourself with that rifle.
Tannerite would take care of those dams
Just let the animals live
Good morning 🌞 Al and Gina, the bone you found looks more like a shoulder blade bone than an antler. I really like watching you walking through the more wilderness area of your property. It’s such a beautiful property you have, blessings to you and your family, stay safe and have a wonderful day. A little late, but Happy Thanksgiving 🦃🍁🍽 we hope you had a wonderful day with family 👍💪🙌🙏🌈✌️🐽🐷🐖
I am a true animal lover but I have seen the damage both beaver and wild hogs can do to property. Good luck stopping them from further damage. You have such a beautiful piece of property. Thanks for sharing it with us.
Reintroducing beavers into the wild was something hailed as ...good for the wildlife and natural eco systems. Was the damage seen by you actually bad for the forest area...or was it perceived as damage to the homesteaders use of the forest? I'm not trying to be disagreeable...I'm just trying to understand better....and put things in perspective.
The guy has more than enough land to leave them alone
@@kooskool yes and no, the areas they keep damning up cause critical roads and trails to flood out that will eventually damage the main part of the homestead. If they go to a area that they don't use and will not damage critical well used area's he may not bother with them, but they do a lot of damage you can not deny that.
@@dakotawinds9291 what damage are you refering to?
@@tinamincheski2195 a lot of the answers you are looking for will be answered according to the use of the property. I grew up on a 315 acre farm. Beavers moved in . Dad showed me the areas affected stating we needed to move them from the areas our cattle grazed and allowed them free range in another area that would not interfere with the safety of humans or the livestock. Knowing they were on the property meant we needed to monitor their activity and take further action if needed.
Hopefully this helps you understand better.
Thanks for bringing up a 60 year old memory.
Take care.
Good morning from Belgium everyone
Good day❤🙏you make the BEST DARK CHOCOLATE.
My family was all born in Germany.
I believe the "moose" bone isn't part of the antlers, looks like a scapula bone.
I’m sure he knows what it is
@@roxannepruitt4024 Apparently not if he kept telling us and Gina it was a Moose antler.
A study was done using the sound of running water to trick the beavers into blocking a leak and this was used to control where the beaver dams were built.
Al, remove all the beavers you can before winter sets in and clear out the dam down to the original depth. Remove the huts later this winter and then in the spring set your traps again because 2 year old kits will be moving in. Beavers destroy land, trees and water.
There are no days off in the life of a farmer...
Gooood morning Lumnah's
So pleased to see you with the rifle, you and Gina must stay safe in your wonderful piece of life!
Thanks for sharing
Know you left the canvas tent up and it is moldy... Vinegar water to kill spray it ..off it slowly . ( Put it away every year dry in the shop hang up a good size center pole and rope it off wall ones . Pulley for center up to the ceiling
Normally you might be able to sic your dog on the beavers to drive them away, but with Brutus I would be afraid of him accompanying the beavers back to the pasture area to meet the rest of the homestead livestock.
😁
I have a new business suggestion for you, Al. Beaver tail hats!
And hence the term " busy as beavers" so great to see your property up close and beautiful.
Thank you so for sharing, great video for after thanksgiving viewing.
AL, that is not a moose antler shed, that's a moose shoulder bone.
Good morning, 25F this morning in central Michigan, and a high of 30F today. First measurable snow fall at 1".
Al: Depending on the type of water body they occupy, beavers will construct freestanding lodges or will excavate burrows known as bank dens. Lodges and dens are used for safety, and a place to rest, stay warm, give birth, and raise young. Lodges and dens are not subsurface, and have enough air exchange to allow beaver, muskrats, and other air breathing fish and wildlife to breathe while conditions are otherwise limiting. Freestanding lodges are built in areas where the bank or water levels aren’t sufficient for a safe bank den. Lodges consist of a mound of branches and logs, plastered with mud. One or more underwater openings and tunnels lead to center of the mound, where a single chamber is created. Bank dens are dug into the banks of streams and large ponds, and in some sites a lodge may be built over the den. Bank dens may also be located under stumps, logs or docks. Beavers living in cold climates store branches of food trees and shrubs for winter use by shoving them into the mud at the bottom of ponds or streams near the entrance to their bank den or lodge, or may create a floating cache anchored by its own weight or large branches at the top of the cache frozen in ice or otherwise anchored. This latter cache type appears to be most common in larger rivers and other areas with rocky substrate.
Unfortunately you need to take care of the mold issue on the tent before you use it again it would not be healthy to be inside and breathe the mold. It would have been good to do that when the weather was warmer.
Y'all have some beautiful piece of country.
Beaver do not cut trees to waste, but they will drag the small tops to build first and wait for the water to rise so they can float the large stuff later rather than drag it. It is a lot easier to float it and act as tug boat rather than bulldozer on the ground getting hung up on brush and other trees. It really is amazing how they know the future water levels without all the tools we use. The engineering skills they have are an amazing thing to behold. But yeah, land owners cannot afford to let them destroy their forests.
This guy owns 500+ acres and he lives off youtube likes. He does not need that Little piece of forest to survive. Al is Just making a big show
@@kooskool No he is protecting his cattle operation from disease. Beaver fever is spread through the water downstream. It does not impact them, but it does cattle. The beavers are just carriers and spreaders.
@@markpashia7067 cattle operation?? 5 cows? It is a youtube operation. The Beavers were there long before Al and Gina came and do no harm
Hey Al and Gina, is there any way that you can get to the dams with your excavator without it getting stuck, to open gaps to start draining the water. Once drained would it then be useful to remove all beaver dens and debris? Hey I’m an Aussie so we don’t have beavers here. Man they certainly are destructive.
as Al mentioned, some of these dams are a 1/4 mile hike from where he can drive the 4x4 so at least 1/2 mile from the house. That's too far for driving heavy equipment without excess wear. OTOH, some of these may be cleared via a grappling hook using the winch on the 4x4. They can also be blown apart with explosives. (easier to carry)
I hope you can get one or two of them. Trapping them is hard than ever. But keep up the great work indeed.
Beaver mostly cut trees down to access the smaller branches and leaves from the top. They use very few large logs.
Al what you called a wasp nest was a hornets nest . Hornets are more aggressive than wasp when prevoked . I'm glad that you didn't get stung I don't think that one was in use .
This would be the ideal time to have a Sherp. I'll never get one but I always think about it.
Yep
It’s a shoulder blade
Not antler
Good Saturday afternoon New Yolk🥚City .... your moose antler looks like a scapula? Tha's a real mess back in the swamp .... it will be interesting to see if you are able to catch the🦫🦫🦫🦫🦫🦫 Take care AL, Gina & Olivia .... have a nice day 🦫🌲🍁🍂
Not a shed. That's a scapula. Part of the shoulder structure of the moose
Good video today, it was refreshing to you do something different - other than to build something or buy something. Good luck on those beavers, not sure if I missed an update on that moose that was in the pond. Take Care!
I think that bone you found is a scapula/shoulder blade. I have one just like it from elk from this year hunting... good luck with those beavers, they are relentless but fun to trap!
@aaronhume Brutis will still enjoy, if he can have it. I just don't know......
@Al, You gonna get those trees outta there and use them as firewood rather just wait for them to rot?
The old timers used dynamite on those critters lol😅
Good morning from a sunny Mangac- lavel France
Goooooooood Morning France
Al is pretty good at tracking and finding animals👏🏻👏🏻😃
Good morning Al a brisk 34 degrees here in South Georgia enjoy your videos
Goooooooood Morning Georgia. Stay warm it’s 27 here
🙋♀️ Good Morning Al, Gina and Olivia!! I Hope you had a Wonderful Thanksgiving! 🍁🍂
Good morning to all of the great folks who hang out on this channel. Greetings from Salem, Oregon.
Goooooooood Morning Hugo
Good morning from the Smoky Mountains.
Good morning, BoscoBob!
@@samvalentine3206 And...a good morning to you, also, Mr. Samvalentine.
Good morning @hugohugunin currently visiting friends in Milwaukie today. I live in Europe but I was raised in Portland.
Good morning y'all the Beavers are tearing it up again. I know Al get them sooner or later hopefully sooner then later. I know you said you ordered something, but you definitely need hiking gear.
Good morning Al Gina and Olivia hope y'all have a blessed day together and you all had a great thanksgiving together with Gina's parents.
You guys are a blessing to so many people
Goooooooood Morning Kip we did thank you. Hope you had a great thanksgiving too
Lots of great firewood if you are able to get to it.
Yes I wish we could get to it. We I kept saying the same thing
@@LumnahAcres - Where there's a will... there's a way!
Thanks for sharing the video. I enjoyed doing things like that myself. Walking in the woods finding different things.Moose antlers deer antlers. Or just taking a walk in the woods.
For those who don't know what a popple tree is, it is "Populus tremuloides" or quaking aspen. Just a note from your friendly plant taxonomist in WV.
Poplar
@@Tom-ei8ly Is he trying to say quaking aspen or poplar? Definitely 2 different trees.
THANK YOU!!
Al to day the hoof GP came out with a video, and it up front showed a really good raceway you should see. For your work station for going into and out of. You could do it in wood as well. Thumbs up 👍
Glad to see you carrying a rifle, have been concerned for your safety on some of your ventures into the woods with all of the big creatures in your area.
Paper wasp nests last quite a while after the wasps have died off. I gather some, including the queen, find a secluded place to over winter.
Wow! You have to stop this! It is really messing up the land!
Good morning folks ! I was taking care of a boat issue and that in important since I live on it !
Good morning y'all from the south of Texas. Don't forget to smile even when you're discouraged, it'll help make the tough times easier.
Goooooooood Morning Eric
Good morning, Eric - Thank you for your positive view of things... it helps!
@@samvalentine3206 Good morning Sam, hope you had a happy Thanksgiving.
Wow! Looks like you have alot of fire wood to harvest. Or some good outdoor rustic furniture
Have a great weekend to all in the Lumnah Universe
👍🏾🤩🐶
Goooooooood Morning Gin
Good evening, Juergen!
The 3rd pond clearly shows a beaver lodge inside the pond it's surrounded by water all around
something tells me this is going to be a constant battle between you and the Beavers
This reminds me of the day a man in our neighborhood tried dynamite on his pond/lake. It's approximately 3 to 5 miles away as the crow flies. His plan worked maybe too well😮 when all was said and done. He caused two roads to wash out. The force was so strong it flooded my small stream and the road was gone around the culvert.😅😂 we still laugh 30 years later.
Beavers can do some damage but this man did more😮
Thanks for sharing. Gina you do great job on thes nature 😊videos
Don’t forget! If you trap a beaver. You have to eat it!😅
Good morning, and have a wonderful day
Goooooooood Morning Travus
Good morning, Travus!
Can you go back and tour the original stuff? Storage home fire pit etc. would be fun to see years later.
Al and Gina may you both get those beavers 🦫 soon hope you both had a wonderful Thanksgiving also Olivia 😮😊❤
That’s not an antler, it’s either a shoulder(scapular) or part of the pelvic of a moose. Gina you can still beat Al to find a shed
Good morning , Lumnah Acres from the deer blind waiting for the sun to come.
Goooooooood Morning. Hope you get a big one
Totally off topic for today's video, but when you showed where the beavers were eating the maple trees, it reminded me of a question. Are you collecting sap from the maple trees on your new property to make Maple Syrup? We enjoy your videos!
Good morning i wonder if beavers ever get tooth aches,and how quick they can take down one of those bigger trees.hopefully you can get them pretty quick.lots of firewood you can cut❤
Good morning from Washington State. It’s 3am and 33 degrees.
Goooooooood Morning laurel. Stay warm it’s 27 here
I arranged for New Hampshire fish and game to relocate two breeding pairs of beavers onto the farm i worked at on Canterbury.
They formed two ponds and made the marsh land into a small 8-acre lake.
Before the beaver, the land was useless.
Once they built their dams, we had much more usable land.
Beavers make bread?
@@manolisgledsodakis873 - They make PITA bread... Pain In The *ss brand! (smile!)
That is a scapula (shoulder blade) from a moose. An antler would be even thicker and a lot heavier. I bet you've watched David Ellis (Yawt Yawt). He would also set a trap on the entrance of the beaver lodge. Poking a long stick around it, to find the deep entryways, and setting a trap there. I don't know how deep it is there though. Lol. If you catch one, dare Gina to try beaver stew. It literally tastes like roast beef! It's actually quite good in the crockpot! Lol.
Good morning Lumnahs
Goooooooood Morning Chris
Good morning, Chris!
Hate to ruin your new treasure but that's not an antler. It's a scapula.
Good morning !!
🌹🌹🌹🌹
Good morning, Bo!
❤❤❤
Good morning!
Are you going to learn to tan beaver hide. Beaver jerky?
Those things sound like fun.
Have a wonderful weekend.
❤❤❤
Goooooooood Morning Cary. Yea we want to use the hides.
Good morning, Cary!
@@samvalentine3206
🌞🌞🌞
Good morning Sam!
Goooood morning Lumnahs!!!!!!
Good morning, you three! Beavers are pesky animals. It’s amazing how much damage they do.
I love ALL Lumnah Acres videos!
They are just building a massive swimming pool :)