-
-
6 months ago
Trees for cow feed
Vist our blog, http://bit.ly/hKa41b // And Facebook page, http://on.fb.me/pRIQvo
Due to the extreme drought in our neck of the woods, Farmer Greg...
81 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
1 year ago
Cow birth on the farm
This past week we had 4 heifers born, and one cow still to birth! God has really blessed us!
Have a Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year!!!
697 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
1 year ago
New Born Great Pyrenees Puppies
AKC Great Prys. These guys are so cute!
295 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
2 years ago
Sweet New, Rhode Island Red Chicks
200 new Chicks came from Nebraska,
321 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
2 years ago
-
2 years ago
Rare quad goats!!!
This is Sugar goat, she just had quads, and that is very weird!!! They are so CUTE!!!!
533 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
2 years ago
Farm Morning- Movable Hen- House
A farm Morning. Farmer Greg Moves the new hen house.
121 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
2 years ago
Farmer Greg talks about the movable- hen house
Here is farmer Greg talking about his new movable- hen house. it is 10x20" and will hold up to 500 birds!
260 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
2 years ago
Little Barred Rock Chicks
awwww, these are John's new chicks, that hached last night. it was a good hach; 7 out of 10! they are a barred rock cross
264 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
2 years ago
Large Black piglets
4 week old Large Black hogs, eating the pecans under the trees! They are so happy to be running around with our Great Pyrenees and children.
477 views
Restorationfarms
uploaded
-
-
About Restorationfarms's channel
Looking to Yesterday for Tomorrow
restorationfarm4tomorrow.blogspot.com
Created by
RestorationfarmsLatest Activity
Feb 24, 2012Date Joined
Oct 25, 2009About this user
Welcome to Restoration Farm. We are working hard to provide you a tasty, nutrition-rich egg that will make you well instead of sick.Our eggs are raised in a moveable hen house on pasture by happy, healthy chickens. They are moved to a new location on the farm every couple of days to provide them a fresh location to browse from.
Why is this important? First of all, Rather than standing in their pathogen-laden droppings borne in chicken droppings are spread evenly across the field, where it adds fertility to the soil and is purified in the sunshine.
We are a family owned farm, trying to get back to sustainable simpler way for living.
We are raising many diferent kinds of livestock; Large Blacks (hogs), cows, donkeys, milk goats, pyrenees dogs, a weimaraner dog, chickens, geese, turkeys, ducks, peacocks, guinees, quail, rabbits, a pony, cats, and some barn mice :),
Our chickens are on pasture, or in "chicken tractors". They are moved every day, so they get fresh greens and they do our fertilizing for us!