The Power of the Snout

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2022
  • Since 2018, research has been conducted at the Tsawwassen First Nation Farm School, located on Tsawwassen First Nation land in Delta, British Columbia. The study focused on determining best management practices for rotating grazing hogs in vegetable production. Research was conducted involving the integration of hogs and cover crops with vegetable production to determine the viability, applicability, and scalability of the system. This video lays out the research conception, design, and results.
    To learn more about this project, please visit: www.kpu.ca/isfs/integrating-h...
    This research was conducted in collaboration with the Naut'sa Mawt Tribal Council. The project was funded in part by the Government of Canada under the Canadian Agricultural Partnership's AgriScience Program, a federal, provincial, territorial initiative.
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Komentáře • 48

  • @brianripley8405
    @brianripley8405 Před měsícem +1

    Love the narrator's voice. ❤This is an outstanding demonstration. All our universities should be doing this.

  • @greenquilter6441
    @greenquilter6441 Před rokem +7

    this is an excellent demonstration of how integrated methods work!

  • @tedward720
    @tedward720 Před rokem +8

    Awesome! Nice work and thanks for making the great info so accessible and understandable. Peace.

  • @ROCKPILEOffgridHomestead

    Excellent video Thankyou!

  • @Duben-ym5vi
    @Duben-ym5vi Před rokem +2

    very well done!

  • @ashleyalexander7388
    @ashleyalexander7388 Před rokem +4

    subscribed because of the graphics and talk through :)

  • @andrekuh3956
    @andrekuh3956 Před rokem +1

    THANK YOU , VERY MUCH FOR SUCH AN VERY INTERESTING OBSERVATION.
    SO YOU LIGHTEN UP MY VIEWS ON DIVERSE FARM/ RANCH LAND MANAGEMENT. THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR SUCH AN INDEPH RESEACH.

  • @snarky_user
    @snarky_user Před rokem +5

    Unless your only goal is to restore soil for preservation, it only makes sense if you can return the land to industrial production, which defeats the purpose of restoring the soil in the first place. Your animal load was way too small to be viable as pork production. You invested considerable resources into providing food for the pigs that was never consumed because they were removed prior to consuming the roots and radishes. The extra forty percent of seed was essentially expensive pig feed that offset gazing.
    However, the introduction of pigs into fields with cover crops prior to production planting might make considerable sense if the grazing is intensive enough to complete the job before the planting window closes. That's a tough thing to accomplish in late winter.

    • @ViliamGajdos
      @ViliamGajdos Před rokem +5

      I assume this system is not set for business scheme. I would gladly try and use it if I had a plot of land and wanted to have my own meat and veggie. No need to own a tractor is a nice bonus.

    • @corinesingfield1317
      @corinesingfield1317 Před rokem +3

      Scientific experiments need to be replicated many times and as such we used the minimum stocking density possible to keep things manageable. However, as mentioned, it does not make sense from a management perspective to only have 2 pigs per grazing plots. On the rest of the farm we have pigs rotating through acres of land, eating and re-seeding their own forage. And they are eating! Tons of peas, lots of big radishes and everything else which translates to big savings on feed and really healthy parasite-free pigs. The only thing is that you need to move them before they eat over graze.

  • @markpennella
    @markpennella Před rokem +1

    Excellent research video!!

  • @TheOnlySgtRock
    @TheOnlySgtRock Před 4 měsíci

    Great video.

  • @pablotoledo7678
    @pablotoledo7678 Před rokem +2

    Excelente trabajo.... saludos desde Argentina...

  • @stoamnyfarms
    @stoamnyfarms Před rokem +9

    "at least 100 years to form an inch of top soil" You've been reading too many old books. You can get an inch of top soil in less then 10 years easily. Much less if trees are involved.

    • @Rkdawla
      @Rkdawla Před 11 měsíci

      Also depends upon slope, soil texture and precipitation...Dear!

    • @willbass2869
      @willbass2869 Před měsícem +1

      Agreed.
      Bad assumption. Bad science

  • @racebiketuner
    @racebiketuner Před rokem +2

    Keep up the great job!

  • @aherrns1894
    @aherrns1894 Před rokem

    Wonderful

  • @neilrowe119
    @neilrowe119 Před rokem +1

    This was great thanks

  • @alenalen6444
    @alenalen6444 Před rokem

    Thanks for your model.

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP Před rokem +1

    Try and wood chip manure mix to fix those. Goose manure mix with woodchips, goat or rabbit cut will all work as well

  • @Mastadex
    @Mastadex Před 4 měsíci

    This is a great study! Other than proteins, do the pigs get all their nutrients from the cover crops?

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP Před rokem +9

    If they had ducks or geese after the picks it would have worked even better letting them go after cover crop regrowth the last round

  • @soullivankhamtun1687
    @soullivankhamtun1687 Před rokem +1

    I like the promising result of the research. where can is find the result of the research in journal?

  • @rhosus2787
    @rhosus2787 Před rokem +3

    Born to be ham

  • @lisanelhiebel5669
    @lisanelhiebel5669 Před rokem +1

    WHAT ARE WE WAITING FOR

  • @Tim23522
    @Tim23522 Před rokem +7

    I think you stacked the deck. Using a disc causes compaction, that is why in construction they use it for drying and compaction. More you use it, the more it packs, more plow pan at the bottom of the tillage. That edge of the disc packs. Lot of plow pan causes a barrier of water and air movement in the soil. This happens a lot when you use it as a primary tillage, multi passes, as you seem to have rather then as a just a finish pass. I not saying the pigs won't do better, I just saying, I don't I trust the results. I think you should go with farming like regular farms. The same machines, same methods. As overseeding, maybe you should use modern planting instead of broadcast like in the middle ages. I think you might get a better stand, maybe better since all seeds are at the best depth for the seed. Maybe you should also look at the calcium and sulfer in the soil. Any soil going to compact without these two. On 100 years for 1 inch of topsoil, I would like to add, that decay of roots create topsoil, not the plant on top. Topsoil I think is mostly grass lands. I think really regenerative farming is a good idea. But your not going to get a farmer to change if you don't do a honest comparison of practice.

    • @arthurdewith7608
      @arthurdewith7608 Před rokem +1

      I have 1000 acres to work up come over and help me pull weeds by hand

    • @sillydogfarms2983
      @sillydogfarms2983 Před rokem

      There ARE farmers who manage cover crops like the tillage plot.

    • @Tim23522
      @Tim23522 Před rokem

      @@arthurdewith7608 Don't understand what that means or how that ties in.

    • @Tim23522
      @Tim23522 Před rokem

      @@sillydogfarms2983 I thought you were talking regular crops, not like turnups, other heavy root crops like beans that going to break the soil. And I agree, the farmer next to me does. Not that it is right. Still say discing packs and really only works maybe 4 to 6" deep and gives a plow pan layer the plant roots don't want to go through. I think it holds back water too but not for sure.

  • @ihlianthinks
    @ihlianthinks Před rokem +1

    Did you feed the pigs some extra grain? Or did they just consume what was on the pasture?

    • @corinesingfield1317
      @corinesingfield1317 Před rokem +3

      Pigs need to be fed a high protein diet and they eat a lot. We did feed them grains but reduced the amount of feed while they were on pasture.

  • @homeistheearth
    @homeistheearth Před rokem

    What about using chickens instead of pigs? Could this do similar?

  • @benjamindejonge3624
    @benjamindejonge3624 Před rokem

    That’s always my question to big industry corn boys, how many earth worms per feet

  • @lost329
    @lost329 Před rokem +1

    No control?

  • @sjk7314
    @sjk7314 Před rokem

    What breed of pig is that?

  • @jimmydykes7961
    @jimmydykes7961 Před rokem

    No way I'll turn hogs loose on my fields

  • @cmbryan564
    @cmbryan564 Před rokem

    p̷r̷o̷m̷o̷s̷m̷ 😳

  • @peterclark6290
    @peterclark6290 Před rokem

    Even for its day a 4 way cover crop is too limited. Does the brush hogging prove anything except the effects of suspending root growth and penetration? Bare soil is farming failure. Puddles are compaction central. What testing was done, compaction, SOM, etc? What conclusions re 2 day usage vs: single day or half day access? A very poor 'experiment'. Regenerative Agriculture?
    100 years to grow one inch of top soil? Keep that to yourself. Farmers are earthworm-herders 1st, 2nd and 3rd and results of inches per decade are recorded on farms that use *regular compost sprays, as fast and as often as the Bioreactors* can pump out suitable material. Feed the worms with humus, bacteria and fungus and sit back.

  • @jol1958
    @jol1958 Před rokem

    Goats are a safer choice.

  • @terrydoble1468
    @terrydoble1468 Před 3 měsíci

    If you think there’s no “data” on whether animals properly managed improve soils, your not looking very hard. Sounds like your trying to justify your job.

  • @ra3dbadr
    @ra3dbadr Před rokem

    *GOATS WOULD DO A BETTER WORK*

  • @Stevenowski
    @Stevenowski Před rokem +2

    This is a biased study at the very least.