 Hello everybody, welcome back. We are here again at Farm Sanctuary with Brooke this time, but we're doing something a little bit different today. If you remember last time, we took a little tour around the farm, saw some animals, but today we're putting in the work. Yeah, you are. We're gonna be working the farm. Mika's here also. Hi, I am here. I'm ready to get dirty. I think we should get right to it. You know, they're waiting for us. They are waiting right now. I heard we're putting sunscreen on pigs today. Yes, you are. I'm so excited. I'm so excited. Well, let's do it. All right, great. Let's go. So, Brooke, what do you do here at Farm Sanctuary? I am the manager of wellness. Cool. So, I'm a caregiver and I take care of the animals on a daily basis. Make sure everybody's happy and healthy and well-fed and take care of them medically, anything they might need in terms of health care, pain management. We're gonna start off in here, but we do need to grab some supplies that are gonna be in our office over here. Okay, cool. Cool. All right, so let's grab some supplies. Are we allowed to come in? You're allowed. Yes. Oh, there's a cat. Who is this cat? Oh, yes, this is Boris. Hi, Boris. Hi, Chris. How many cats do you guys have? Because there was like a white one that we saw last time, I think. We have three cats. Cool. Three cats and you're gonna meet them all. It smells like food in here. Yeah. Like animal food. Like animal food. Yeah. We are gonna need our syringes that have a medication in them. And we have a leg brace here for Regina, our three-legged sheep. All right. All right, you ready? I'm ready to go. All right. Let's do this. Let's head over to the sheep barn. There are a few sheep that are out already, because they had some. Hi. It's already, she had a mash earlier, which is why she's got a green face. Is there a certain way that you want us to approach any of the animals? Yeah, it's a little bit more involved. They're gonna be really excited to come out of the barn. Hi. Good morning. That's Snuggles. Hi, Snuggles. I know we're holding up your breakfast right now. Hi. I know. Oh, sweetheart. I would just say, if they move away from you, just don't push it, let them go. Right now they're gonna be pretty focused on food and just coming out of the barn and starting the day. Whoa. Oh, embarrassing. Gotta go back. We're gonna put out some hay into these feeders. Great. So let's, we can hang up our supplies on these carts over here. I will take that. I'm so excited for you. All the animals here are so cute. I love animals so much. All right, so basically we're gonna grab this wheelbarrow that's over here. Okay. And wheel it in and just put the flakes of hay into the feeders over here. So you wanna grab that wheelbarrow. This one? Yeah. Good job, babe. Thanks, babe. I'm helping. I'm helping. Okay. Okay. And we're gonna clear out all the old hay from the bottom of these. Okay. So you put one flake in each one. So that's perfect. And then you kinda fluff it up a little bit, open it up a little bit, like that. It's delicious, doesn't it? Oh yeah. So good, so yummy. Yeah. Just doing a hard day's work. Out here on the farm. How long you been out here? Me? Yeah. Since I was four. How long have you been working here, bro? I just recently celebrated my 10-year anniversary. 10 years. Congratulations. Thank you. How many of these do you guys go through a day? A day? A day. I would say we go, the flakes make up a bale of hay, and I would say for the sheep, we go through a little less than a bale every day. For the cows, we go through, like, sometimes six. And this is like their full day food, they just eat this. They're gonna get this again tonight, too. Oh, wow. Yeah, they get this hay twice a day. We're also out of flakes. Oh, okay. We're gonna need some more flakes. Yes. So who are those two? Those are Ada and Malala. Malala. They just need extra calories, so they get mashes every morning. Ooh. Howdy. You wanna take one of these flakes? Yeah. I'll take one of those. Now do we release? Now we're gonna give a couple of them some meds, and then we're gonna release our friends. Hello. Good morning. Oh, we have to clean. There's boogers. There they go. There they go. They're out. They're out. They're out. It's okay. The rest of this stuff can happen later. They are ready to start the day. That's Bear, and she's got boogers on her nose. She's got chronic nasal discharge, so we clean the boogers from her face. All right, can I give you this? Yes. Do you want one of us to clean the boogers, or do you want to clean the boogers? I want you to clean the boogers. Oh, good. Do you want to clean, or do you want me to clean? No, you clean the boogers. All right, I'll clean the boogers. Just give her a wipe. Yep. You just wipe the boogers off. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Come here. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Get it all out. Can all those boogies out? Whoa, there you go. Yeah, a good one. Let it out. That was really good. Do they just, like, travel up the hill during the day? Yeah, they can go all the way up there. We've got, like, a place structure up there. We've got grass that we grow up there, too. And you guys have, what, is 200 acres or something? Oh, it's actually 26 acres. Okay, it's New York that has them. How many acres is New York? Or maybe I'm making these things up. How many acres is New York? A couple. I think, like, 400. 400? All right. Ada and Malala are going to go start their day right now. So we're just going to kind of get out of their way and let them out. Malala does get a syringe. Which one is Malala? Malala is with the droopy ears and the wool right there. Very cute. Good job. There you go. All right. Now they're just going to want to go start the day. There's another little group in here that we're going to live in. And this door? Mm-hmm. I know. You don't recognize me. I'll get out of your way. I love how they run. This is Pearl. She's probably, like, the most wary. So we might just want to... Bye, Pearl. Bye, Pearl. And then we've got the last stall over here. Which is Biscuit, who's our blind sheep. Okay. And Regina, who's our three-legged sheep. Biscuit, we don't want to go in there with him because we don't want to spook him too much. All right. So we're going to open this up and let them come out on their own. Hey, Biscuit. Biscuit. And then Regina. Hi, Regina. She's our three-legged sheep. Oh, look at him go. So Regina is one of the most labor-intensive in terms of care just because she only has three legs. So we need to put a brace on her. Okay. And then she also has a sore on her keel from the way that she sits. So we have to cover that every day with a bandage. And then she's got a t-shirt on over top to keep the bandage on. Got it. And she gets a syringe too. We are going to give her the syringe and put her brace on and treat her keel. Cool. Yeah? All right, great. Ooh. Ooh, Regina. Sturretting. How old is Biscuit? Biscuit's still pretty young. He's still got some baby teeth. So he's only a few years old. I like Biscuit looking. He's so happy. Hi. Hi, Biscuit. Hi, Regina. Hi, Regina. All right. Regina is like the most patient of patients too. Yeah. She's such a good girl. So every day we clean her the straw off of her leg. Yeah. Make sure she doesn't have a lot of urine on her leg. Clean it up if it needs to be cleaned up. And we put this brace on it. Regina, you're so good. Yeah, Regina. She's such a good girl. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. It's like a really good defense mechanism too. Yeah. How often do you get pooped on? Oh, all the time. Every day. Yeah. I mean, pretty much. Yeah. A lot of times by her. So is this brace specifically made for sheep? Oh, yep. It's custom made for her. Oh, wow. Only the best. Whoa. She's really good at doing handstands. Handstands. Yeah, wow. She likes her syringe. You can give this to her. Do you want to give it to her? Sure. She just squirted into her mouth. How did he know? He went this. Oh my gosh. You really do like it. All right. And then we take her shirt. Her little jacket off. Shirt off. So underneath, there is a wrap in there. So we'll be changing the wrap today. Does Biscuit get anything special? He does get special things for sure. On a regular basis, he gets music therapy. What music does he like? You know, I'm not sure what his favorites are. But we go in there and spend time with him. Just listening to different kinds of music. He likes to spend a little bit. Bye, Biscuit. Bye, Biscuit. All right. And she's ready. She's done. Ready to go for the day. Good job, Regina. You did great. You did real good, Regina. Next, we are going to go to the goats. Ooh, I love goats. Mika grew up with a goat. I did. His name was Ike. We would put a leash on him and he would run us down the road on our skateboards. Okay. Nice. Oh, we've got some puppies. Hi. Oh, my goodness. Oh, the pup's jobs. To poop a lot. No, the puppies, somebody dumped them here. So they already have places where they're going to be going. Those cute little things. Babe, what do you think so far? What do you think I remember? You can put this in your pocket if you want. So many animals. Got a Randy Mesh and a Freddie Mesh. There you go. Wow. So what is this comprised of? These are oat pellets and rice bran pellets. And then I'm guessing this is how you give them their medicine? That's all of Randy's medications in bananas. Would you say that goats are your favorite? Oh. You see the pigs? They're huge. Big man. I guess that's Junip over there. Hi, Junip. Are they huge? Hello. So, we've got some goats in here. Randy is going to get this gigantic mash with all the mebs in it. So he's going to stay in the barn. He's with the big horns over here. One or so. Oh. Yeah. Do you want to bring that mash in here? And then you can start feeding him the bananas. And then the rest of these guys are going to want to feed Adelon out of this barn. Go ahead. Let them, let them have it. There you go, Randy. I like your horns. You are just, there we go. Perfect. Freddie, this little dude over here is going to get the little mash. So if you want to bring that over into this little area over here. Not for you. I'm sorry, buddy. You can set it on the ground over there. The goats sometimes get kind of stranger danger-y. So if you then just come back on over here, we will make his way in there unless he's just untrusting of the situation. Which one's Freddie? The little guy. The little guy? Nobody. He's got the same colouring as Spencer. Go ahead. Get your mash ready. Like a little Caesar. There you go. He's pretty cool. He's too wary. He'll make his way over eventually. Right now we can go hang out with Randy in the barn. How old is Randy? Randy is like about 20. Oh my goodness. Is that really old for a goat? It is. Very old for a goat. This is an Assisi loop. It's pain management. It uses electromagnetic pulse therapy to help with managed pain. And we put it on his right rear right here. It stays on for 15 minutes. We basically just sit here with him for 15 minutes twice a day. Do you want to hold this on here? Yeah. Okay, great. And we also groom him too. So do you want to groom him? Yeah. Randy gets the star treatment. Before he heads out, we put pain relief on his joints as well. Okay. So just rub it into each of his joints a little bit and I'll hold him. This one's great, Randy. Such a good boy, right? All right. Good job, Randy. Good job. Bye, Randy. And we got to give these guys hate too. Whoa. Hate for you guys. Okay. So we're going to... So impatient. Let this up between... Very impatient. Between this long feeder here and then these bowls too. Okay. Did you eat yet? Freddie, are you going to come over here? So you want to eat? Come on, Freddie. Go on, bud. You can do it. Good job, Fred. It's all for you. The red carpets rolled out. A little shy. A little camera shy. Yes. Oh, premature. He reminds me a lot of Spencer. This is like when we want Spencer to come inside. No, this is specifically when we're going to bed and Spencer does not want to go to bed. Yeah. And we're like, Spencer, go. Please. You have to literally like herd him into the bedroom. We're basically just going to walk through the pigs and say hello to them. Wonderful. Oh, we're not doing anything with the pigs? Not right this second now. Oh my goodness. This is Juniper, you said? Junip. Junip. Hi. Hi, Junip. How much overrunner would you say this pig weighs? About 500 to 600 pounds. Because when I came here the first time, I didn't realize that pigs got this big normally. But I was told, hello. I was told that like normally they do get this big, but we just don't see them like that because usually they're killed before then. Exactly. They're killed at a pretty young age. At like six months, right? But this is a full grown pig. Yeah, she's full grown. And what kind of pig is this again? She is a mix of a durock. I'm not sure what else, but she's a durock mix. She's a little bit more like wild looking. Yeah. She was rescued from a petting zoo. Oh, there's Vondie right there. Hi, Vondie. Hi. Good morning. Sorry to wake you. Well, that's Morris right there. That's Lisa Turtle. And then this is Slater in the corner. So you are the early riser, Junip. She's the early riser. She's always... Early riser. She likes to catch the worm out there. Did you want to go in there and say hi to anybody? Yeah. I'll go in and say hi. That's all right. Hello, everybody. Yeah. So this is Morris here. Hello, Morris. Oh. Hey, guys. Working hard or hardly working, bud? There'll be a lot more rowdy at breakfast time. Oh, get that itch. Oh, yeah. Get that itch. Yeah. And then we're going to go feed the cattle and donkeys. Hey, buddy. Yeah. Pee-haw. Albert's a lover. Wow. Aw, you look like a lover. Yeah, buddy. Is this your house, Albert? It's a nice house out here. And then we've got these guys out here. These guys are from New York, from the Watkins Glen. Thanks for everything. They took a cross-country trip adventure over here and live here now. Got your fly masks on? Yep, they've got fly masks on. I was about to ask what those are. Fly season has begun here and their eyes get pretty itchy. Yeah. If we don't cover them up. Oh, hello. In my ass. So we're going to basically corral these guys up the alleyway. Okay. Because they're all going to eat up there. Come on. Let's go, let's go, let's go. All right, we're moving. We're moving and we're moving. There we go. We're moving and we're moving. Good job. Think Spencer could do this? Yeah. No. Let's go, let's go. Albert is very round. He is. He's a bit rotund. He's a bit rotund. And honky-tonks up here, right? Honky-tonk is bound to be around somewhere. Yeah. Babe, you're going to love honky-tonk. Oh, and uh, hold on. Don't tell me his name. Huge cow. Start from this. Oh. Hold on. I'll give you the camera. What is it? Saffron. Saffron. Yeah. I wouldn't have gotten it. Honky-tonk. What's up, my guy? Hey buddy. Would you like? We have to feed the cows and donkeys their hay. You are so huge. Warch. It's insane. I feel like exceptionally big. Correct? I mean, he's exceptionally big in that you just don't normally see that, but that's about as big as they would normally be getting. Yeah. So we're going to go into this hoop house over here and get some hay. Hoop house. The black ones are a little bit shy. Little shy. Honky-tonk. Honky-tonk's not shy at all. Nah, he's the greeter. So these bales are pretty heavy. We're going to be putting these bales onto the hay cart. Whoops. Hey bud. Hi Saffron. Hi Saffron. You're big. Wait. No, Saffron. No. Saffron. Yeah, I think it's a giant scratching post sometimes. Hold on. Hold on. Saffron, wait. Please. Saffron. Just drop one basically into here so we can just like finagle it through one of the slats on the side. Perfect. Then one of you can go in there and use this nice to crack the nail open. There's three bail twines. And then we're taking this over to a different one. Yes. I'm going to start doing that. Sounds good. Perfect. And then you want me to just fluff this out? Yeah. You can just kind of put it around the edge. It doesn't have to be super fluffed, but just kind of broken up a little. And we want to make sure to get those three bail twines. I feel like I've made friends now. Like maybe I can. What are all their names? Leah. But Donka Donk. I don't know what the Donkeys' names are. Hey guys. Yeah. Got the good stuff. Delivered just this morning. Okay. All right. Awesome. Good job. Do you want to ride on it? Do you want to ride on it? No, do you want to ride on it? No, do you want to ride on it? No. Yeah, I'll ride on it. That's a really good idea. Fresh feed. Fresh feed. Cowboy, come get your food. Safi, we got a fresh one for you. New itching post. Just came in. God, I don't like being right down here. Oh, God. Are we going to be doing anything with the horses? Well, yeah. We are going to be feeding them. Cool. We're going to go in here. This is our horse tack area. So we're going to be preparing the mashes for the horses. We are going to be putting pellets into these containers. How many of these? All of them? Or just these four? This blue one here is going to be for Honky Tonk. And then the rest of the three. About that much in each. Okay. If you want to put it in there. And then the next two is up. Just a little bit of food, you know? Just a little bit. Just a little bit of food, you know? All the time. Cool. Just a little bit. Then we're going to add some stuff. Wait a little more. Oh, it's just a little bit. Get out of your way. Oh, just a little bit. And then some probiotics for the horses as well. Cool. So we'll switch a room in the red and the green bucket. Just one of these? Yep. All right. Now we just leave those there? We'll leave those there. We'll be giving them out a little bit later. I'm going to drive the John Deere tractor. I want to get in the bucket. Got one of these babies at home. Drive this to work every day. Yeah, why don't you tell me about this guy? It's good on gas. Yeah? Yeah, because he uses diesel. All right. We're moving back on down this way. Down this way. Yes. Hello. So we're going to pass through. We're going to let Randy go out from eating his mash. Cool. And then pretty much we're going to go down to the birds. Feed all the birds. Feed all the birds. Open up the birds. Medicate them. All the turkeys and? The turkeys and the chickens. The chickens. Hello. Hey, cutie. Hello. Someone else is awake. Who is this? That's Lisa Turtle. Lisa Turtle. Lisa. Potom. Potom. Potom. Potom. What? All right. All right. Where are you? Huh? Who? What? Where am I? Potom. Potom. Potom. Potom. Potom. Potom. We got into the birds now. If you can save very quietly, obviously. Who's your favorite sheep? Oh, my favorite sheep. We won't tell. Very quietly. Oh, that's so hard because there's so many good ones. Yeah. I'm quite partial to snuggles. The one who came out first. And created us. The cutest little wrinkly nose. The least favorite. Who's the biggest pain in the ass? Nobody. They're all wonderful. Is there a particular type of animal that you really like spending time with? I love spending time with the chickens. Yeah. They're so entertaining to just like sit there and hang out and watch. Yeah. Yeah. They've got so much personality. Well, let's go see them. Yeah. I'm ready. All right. We're going to start off. We have three different aviaries. Okay. This one's called Globe Theater. And we have a turkey tom in here and two roosters. Okay. So this is the boys club over here. It's a little fried house. Yes. So we're going to grab their food, which is in here ready to go. And we have to add some medication to this bowl here. So basically we're going to be putting the medication that Bowie's on into grapes and then putting the grapes into his bowl. So you said there's two roosters in the turkey? Yes. Two roosters in a turkey tom. He's the only male turkey we have right now. Turkey tom. What kind of meds are these? So most of those are antibiotics, but he's also on a pain medication as well for a potential infection that he has in one of his hawks. This is going to be for Bowie and that's going to be for the roosters. The rooster boys get a little feisty sometimes. Okay. Their food goes in these bowls so you can put one there and then the other over here. Like spread it out or put the bowl in? Just put the bowl in there. Yeah, sometimes they spill them, which is why they're in the bigger ones. They get a nice shaded area. It is nice and shady over here. We're going to let the two roosters out and then we're going to feed Bowie his bowl inside the barn. Okay. I love the door pushing. I think that's Bowie. So we kind of have to keep Bowie in because he's the most jazzed to start the day. Hey Bowie. Hey bud. So you're going to go over here. A little dinosaur. And he, if you want to bring that bowl of food in, that way he sees he's got his breakfast and that's going to go right in here. Just set the bowl inside there and he'll start eating it. There you go buddy. There's another rooster in that corner. There is a cent about this place. He's very farmhouse. And this is Dale. Hi Dale. Hi Dale. Did you know that you were once a velociraptor? Reason? Yeah. Yeah. Specifically him. So now we're going to the hens. A lot of chickens are in the next aviary over there. We're going to go say hello to them and there's some more turkeys too. So what is this aviary called? This is called the Chico aviary. Chico. It's named after a rooster who once lived in here named Chico. All right. So this is everything for them. Would you like? Oh, thank you. Okay. And I'll give you this. Cool. And we're going to go into the first stall over here. Hi. I know, right? Alexandra's going to eat in here. This is for you, my friend. And then those can come outside. Even if you want to set that bowl down on that mat for yours. Oh, not for you. And then you can walk over to the corner and set that down on the corner. So you get the better looking stuff. Hey. Chill, chill, chill. And then we're just going to close up this x-pen and let them eat in peace. Look at that. You get a little bit of privacy. You get the corner room. The VIP room. So we're basically going to grab all of these containers and start carrying them over to the yard. I love that little bird container. Aren't these okay? So the squirrels here are savages. So these are little squirrel proof containers. But the squirrels still figure out how to use them. Yeah. And this is just all for the general pop? Yeah. It's for the gen pop. I love their little greenery. They have like plants and herbs. Yes. We just recently planted all these trees and got that lettuce grow. That one. So one of them, the bowls we make into a mash. And then the house will go over onto that hook over there. Y'all ready for the chickens to leave the barn? I'm so ready. We have a vision loss. He lives with a smaller flock now. And we have to put him in front of food and make sure he's eating every day. The chickens aside from Rod are going to leave the barn. And we're going to leave Rod inside the barn. And we're talking about the man, Rod. Yeah, Rod Stewart. Yeah, Rod Stewart's in here. That's Rod. That's Rod. That's Rod Stewart. King in a castle. King in a castle. Rod, put on a show, bud. All right. He's on stage. Rod Stewart needs a little bit of help eating. So I'm going to grab his food from right out here. He probably can't really see much of anything. Maybe some light, general shapes perhaps. But he can't see very well. So we put him right in front of the food so he doesn't have to try at all. Hey, buddy. There you go, Rod. He, like I was saying, he used to be the numero uno rooster over in the main flock. And he was kind of like the number one bully. But he got knocked down a peg a little bit and he's over in retirement mode over here. He's living a good life. But look at you. Yeah. Look at you, Rod. You don't need to be the top of the flock, you know? No, you rest. He's faking it. It's like Buzz Lightyear said, it's not falling. It's, wait, it's not flying. It's falling style. I don't remember the line. That doesn't really relate to this, but yeah. And then the rest of the chickens out there get this little house of food. So if you want to put that on the hook. You know what's going on. Yeah. Oh yeah. Oh yeah, you got it. Yeah, you're a dinosaur. That's actually the star of Jurassic World Dominion. This is Chris Pratt. Hi, Chris Pratt. He's working on rehabilitating his inventory now. Who's that? This is George. Right, right, right. Yeah. He goes with that. Did you think his name was Chris Pratt? Editors, make sure you put subtitles over that. So everybody else understands. Because like we know what we're saying. And the turkeys obviously do. You know, very pretty. Very pretty, George. Well, where to now? Next is going to be the next aviary over where we've got even more chickens, a couple more turkeys. First we're going to be feeding Serena and Thelma first. They're in here. They're two turkey ladies. Do you think they're all a little bit upset because we're moving slower than you usually would? I think they're typical. They're typical upset right now. Good morning. Wow. Where's our food? So I'm going to feed one of you inside and one of you outside. There you go. You can eat over here in this corner. This is how we should eat at home. How we should eat? You and I? Yeah. It pretty much is how we eat. We both eat in our offices. No, we don't. We eat in the kitchen all the time together. You just have to move the door forward very, very, very slowly. Like in that way? Yep. Yep. We're moving. You're forcing your way out. There you go. Slowly, but surely. Good morning, ladies. Please, guys. Oh, are you talking about Stephen and King, the little Polish? Yeah. Come on out. Come on out, boy. I love him. So Stephen and King were getting picked on. Yeah. The main flock, so they live with the bigger ladies. Do we need to let these guys out? Yeah. So this is kind of a fun thing. Can I do the fun thing? Yeah. So you need to go in there and unlatch that gate and let them out. Okay. So I usually take something with me as like a barrier from Rodolfo's because he likes to get you. Oh, fun. Yeah. He's the rudest rooster of all the roosters we have. Okay. So you're going to latch on that gate that you'll just turn and open it towards you and then they'll all... Cool. I'm afraid. Turn it and then pull the metal latch towards you. Yeah. Oh, turn it. Yep. Perfect. There we go. Come on, guys. And then just leave that wide open. Yeah. You're good. Very good. Cool. You managed to not get attacked by Rodolfo's. I didn't. So Stephen and King eat inside the barn. Okay. So I will take these from you. Cool. Stephen and King inside the barn. Olive is one of our older hens who due to her large size has sort of deformed feet. So she just needs a little bit of help out the barn every day. There you go, Olive. Oh. Oh. Put your model. Hi, ladies. Would you like the little bit? Oh, gosh. Jesus Christ. I'm glad I was wearing gloves. Oh, my goodness. I hate how they do it. Oh, my goodness. It's so gross. They go for it. Jocelyn said it's a school administrator walk. All right. So they're all eating. And we'll go back over here and let Serena and Thelma back out with each other. Hi. Sorry. I have to take this. I have to take it. I'm sorry. There's something else in there. I have to take it. I'm sorry. Done with the birds. So mostly done, yeah. I just need a couple other things, but I don't want to take away any of your chances to clean the barns, too. Cleaning. If that's something that y'all want to do. The real manual labor. Yeah. I'm down for that. Do you want to do some goat barn cleaning? Yes. Yeah. Okay. Goat cleaning. Goat cleaning. We're ready to clean. I'm Chris. Hi. I'm Ethan. Hi, Chris. Ethan and Mika. Mika. And what was that? Mika. Mika, nice to meet y'all. Do y'all want a mask for cleaning? Yeah. It's fine. If it starts to bother us, then it'll be funny for the video. Okay. Great. I didn't realize that the pigs had a big pool. Yeah. They have a good life. Wow. Soak it up. So yeah, so we can go grab the tools. Hi. Hi. Hi. Yeah. Yeah. Really good. You're really doing it. Yeah. I play guitar here. This is our goat barn. Cool. We work? Yes. General, you know, the way we do it is we'll kind of push everything into a pile with the rakes, use the pitch forks, put them in the buckets, and then when the buckets get full, we'll wait until all four are full and then put them in the truck. The tractor. Yeah, the tractor. And then after that, we'll do like a sweep of the floor because we put down some stuff to help absorb the moisture. And we just want to get that up and then we'll put a fresh layer down and straw it down a little bit later today. Cool. Cool. So yeah. Oh yeah. I've been doing this. I've been doing this for about 15 minutes now. Do you have any pro tips for us for next time? A mask. Yeah. It's probably the thing because when you do this all morning. It can get, it can build up. Your boogers are usually black all day. So yeah. Wonderful. I would say use the proper tool. Uh huh. Use a rake when you should rake. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I think all that's left is horse stuff and pig stuff. Okay. So I don't, I don't know what the timeframe is for that, but. Yeah. Should I radio broken ass? Yeah. Sure. The pigs know that it's breakfast time. Let's go. I'm so excited. Who's going to be feeding them? I would like to feed. Okay. So there's six different troughs that you'll go and dump the food in. Okay. You want to get the, you don't want to dump it when the pig is already there because their face is just going to be, it's just going to fall on their face. So you kind of want to beat them to empty troughs and just move slowly. You run, they will run. I'm going to fill up the troughs. You distract them so they don't get. No. Oh, this is going to be interesting. Nice. Nice. Nice. Nice. Okay. Drive by. That was awful. Don't worry. It takes practice. There's like barely anything left. Nicely done. All right. Next is going to be the zinc and we're going to want like, blue gloves for that. Okay. So we zinc Vandie and Junip's ears. And we put sunscreen all over their bodies as well. So Vandie, we want to go to first. So while she's good and distracted by the food. Time for sunscreen. And so I go like in front of her with the trough in between us. Yeah. And so you're just going to want to get a dollop on your hand. Even a bigger dollop than that. I guess I'm overusing the word dollop. You're just going to slather. You're just going to get a dollop on your hand. I guess I'm overusing the word dollop. You're just going to slather it all over her ear. And even on her back too. It gets sunburned. And you can go ahead and do Junip's ears. Oh, good. They do a lot of dancing back and forth and back and forth at the food troughs. They have a distinct hierarchy. Nobody messes with Vandie. Oh, that's the stuff. Oh, yeah. You got Morris coming in. Morris likes to pick on Junip. They kind of like fight over the second position in the hierarchy here. Because Vandie is the matriarch. And Junip is kind of her crony. But Morris would like to be. So he picks on her when he can. Oh, he's coming. Did I get a good amount of sunscreen on him? That looks perfect. Great. That's it for the zinc. Now we're spraying. We're going to spray sunscreen all over Vandie and Junip too. But you can take your gloves off because they're pretty gross after the zinc. What are we spraying? You're spraying basically everywhere. Everywhere that hasn't been zinced. Just not her face. Okay. Yeah, that's what she does. She's a whipper. How much sunscreen do you go through for Vandie? Probably between Vandie and Junip, we go through one of those cans every two to three days. Nicely done, nicely done. And then you can get Junip too. You're sunscreening a pig. That's so fucking good. He's putting sunscreen on. It almost feels like a prank in a way. Horse time. Horse time. Thank you so much again for letting us come and see what it's like to work a day on the farm. Of course. Thank you so much for coming. It's fun to have you. It should have taken some sunscreen from those pigs. Yeah. A little bit for them, a little bit for me, a little bit for them, a little bit for me. Yeah. Okay, so we're going to see these masses that we made earlier. Oh, okay. Okay, so let's see if the squirrels got in there at all. Doesn't look like it. Nice. We did a good job today with that. We made that. Would you eat it? Yeah, would you eat it? Yeah. Five bucks. I would eat it. Oh, I was going to do it. I really should have negotiated that. Where am I going? We are heading over to that beautiful black horse right over to grab that green one. Right, he's looking at us right now. She knows it's time. Do I just slide her right down there? Nope, you just kind of put it right in front of her face. Oh, and she just eats right from here? Yep. Yeah. It is. You want some breakfast? He does. Awesome. Good job. And then she's going to eat this mash, so you're going to hook it on this. Pull here, and then we're going to go give the rest to the other two horses. Okay. This one is for Darla, and then we're going to put it over at this mat over here. So when they get messy and it falls on the ground, they just eat it off the mat instead of the dirt. Nice. Same place? The last one's for Joanne. She eats at the end over here. Joanne's beautiful. She's gorgeous. She's the shyest of the horses, so you kind of like feel real special if you gain her love. You can hook it on just the top of that wooden rail up there. There you go, JoJo. Wow. I just think horses are great. Horses are wonderful. They're magical. Okay, next is going to be their hay. Are we going back into the big cabin? Going in the hoop house. We're going to give Honky Tonk his mash, and then we're going to go into the hoop house. All right, Honky. It's time. It's time. Too low or is it one up? Nope. That's perfect. Wow. Wow. There's a bit of a mishap yesterday where the cows got in here and made a little bit of the mess with the hay, so it's a little bit messy right now. A flake of orchard to each of the horses. Cool. Estimate three flakes. All right. Three of those. This is... And then they also get Timothy hay, which is this next one over. Okay. They get one flake of Timothy, so we'll estimate this as a flake. Okay. Cool. And then they get one flake of Alfalfa, which is... Which is all the way at the end? It's a yummy. And then we're going to wheel this in and start putting it in there. Wheel it out, buddy. Yeah? Yeah. Yeah, happy boy. So they eat in these hay boxes, so we're basically going to divvy up all the hay between these three boxes. Okay. And then they're like slow feeders, so they have grapes on the top, and they just eat through the grapes. So we're going to put like one flake of orchard in each of the boxes. Okay. And then there's that, so then you're going to want to start breaking that up. Here, do you want to bring her over there while I... No, she's distracted now. It's got the mother load right there. Yeah. It's not going anywhere. Why would she want this? Yeah. Make sure everything's all broken up and kind of mix it together. And then we'll put this grate on top. All right. One hay box done. Two to go. All right. So then we're going to go back over to this mat over here. I'll keep her at back. Oops. Hi, darling. My bad. You scare me a little bit. Oh, darling, it's going over there. Okay. So that goes through this sling here. There you go. There you go. Wait. Just hold it on. I can't mix it. What are you doing? You came here. Are you coming here to look at me? You came here to work. You're everywhere. How much? Well, get in here. I'm just doing my job, and you're just standing around looking pretty. Unbelievable. Why don't you put that grate on, babe? Why don't you get that? Fantastic. We've done it. Aren't they cool, Lucas? Your only fear is horses. Lucas doesn't like horses. Dude, stop. It's his biggest fear. If you want to defeat Lucas, you bank, get a horse. Ride up on him. He's very small. You can trample him. All right. Well, that seems to be the AM shift. Yep. That's the bulk of it. The bulk of it. That's the bulk again for letting us come and say hi. Thank you. And working. It is so much fun. So farmsanctuary.org. Yes, indeed. Correct. If you want to check out Farm Sanctuary, there is how many locations? There's two locations. Here in Acton, 45 minutes north of LA, and over in Watkins Glen, New York, which is in the Fingerleaks region of New York. But yeah, we're open every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday throughout the summer for tours. So come on by, please go online and schedule a tour. And we'd love to see as many faces here as possible. Awesome. And then if people want to go the next step, do you guys accept volunteer work? We are currently in the process of reopening our volunteer program. Cool. So be on the lookout on our website for that too. Wonderful. Awesome. And then as well on the website, I can't remember, is there a link to donate to Farm Sanctuary to just help out everything? Absolutely. Yes. It's really hard to find on our website and it's much appreciated. Awesome. Yeah. So if you want to go to farmsanctuary.org, you can learn more about the amazing work that they do here. And also if you've got some bucks to spare, definitely toss it their way. What was your favorite part today? The horses. Anything with horses. And then sunscreening the pigs, which felt like a prank. For both us and the pigs, it was just a fun time all around. It was a good time all around. Thank you so much for your help. Yeah, I hope that we didn't slow down your day too much. Not at all. But thank you so much for letting us come and help out. It's so much fun. Anytime. Well, sweet. Is there anything that you want to shout out about Farm Sanctuary or anything that you're working on or whatever? I just probably just like peace, go veg. Sweet. With my tagline there. Even though I did kind of steal it from somebody, I think. Yeah, no, I think that it's important for everybody if they can to come and meet a farm animal because it's life changing. If you've never met a farm animal before, you really should. Because they're all so, so, so sweet. And each of them have individual personalities. And we'd love to have you guys here to meet them. Yeah. Awesome. Well, thank you so much. And again, make sure to go down in the description down below farmsanctuary.org and check out everything. And if you're in either New York or the LA-ish area, come on by for real. For real, for real. For real, for real. Sweet. Cut to the B-roll montage.