@Dusty3080467325 I’d say anybody that acts like their product or practice is far superior to anybody else’s and you’re an idiot for not using it. Right now that’s the regenerative guys. There’s a million ways to farm and none of them are wrong. I don’t like stuff shoved down my throat though
@TorkTalk There’s a need for both. Truth is commodity prices aren’t the real problem. It’s the lack of diversity on the farm. I wouldn’t want to have to count on row crop alone or livestock alone. Together they are complimentary and quite regenerative even though I hate that term.
@PfanstielJunior I think most people go to the field these days with all that in mind. There’s too many variables that can change that plan pretty quickly though. I would argue if you took away all subsidies and grants related to anything in ag that it would accomplish more than anything else
@gwiesefarms This is plan A. Plan B comes after something random reaches out and slaps you in the dick and you have to start over. Most people have to go with plan B. Lol
@LowBoomLowDrift I have seen changes made to a gleaner combine and white planter that I had talked to engineers about. I’m sure I wasn’t the reason it changed. Guessing there were many people that made the same suggestions but who knows
@SamTheSeedGuy1 Regenerative farming does it for me. I think it’s the dumbest terminology out there. Especially as a livestock guy. We raise corn and feed it to livestock and haul manure out and grow more corn. Not sure how it gets any better than that.
@clintwfischer He’s already ahead of most of he wants a mentor and doesn’t think he knows everything already. I still depend on my mentors quite often and in my 40s. I kinda feel like it has to just happen though and that the right one will come along.
@SchwabMatt@JLinvilleFert Agree with this 100 percent. If you are not fully employed find a way to get there. Has always been very important to me that everyone on the farm is fully employed and also equipment is fully employed. We run newer stuff but run it ragged. Get every acre you can out of it.