 It is a beautiful Saturday morning here in New York and we are heading to Pennsylvania today. The past few farms we've seen have actually been upstate New York but now we're going about two and a half hours into Pennsylvania and we're gonna take a look at one farm that is about two and a half hours away and then another farm is about two hours away and it's a one-hour drive from that other farm so although I'm not really looking forward to sitting in my car for you know five hours today it's not too bad and I do everything for you guys because the end goal is to provide as many people as possible with high quality animal foods to make as many people as happy and healthy as possible. Unfortunately that involves me doing everything myself including raising the animals, raising the eggs, raising the dairy, all that stuff. What is this? Day 742 with no haircut so we're up here at Dairy Farm. What is the acreage? 125, 123. It's funny because I've been to like 180 acre farms and all these people lie about the acreage and it's like they're like half the size of this but they're saying it's like 200 acres. So yeah really nice looking property. Guy was milking dairy a couple years ago right? We stopped by four years ago. Yeah now you have what you have a couple cows just grazing, selling some beef. I like to do insurance full-time so this guy doesn't have to do too much to deal with it. This guy's coming to himself. How many hours a week were you working when you were doing the cows and the insurance? 4.30 and going till 9.30 every day. Man, every day seven days a week? Yeah. And run from the house to the barn in my car, shower quick, go back the office. Jesus. How stupid. So this part here, this little addition right here on the end, we built that brand new about 12 years ago. This is the milk house where the milk comes into. Okay. So these woods over here, that's... It goes straight up to that ridge. Basically this whole ridge is ours. So there's 80 acres on this side and 40 on this side, like 83 on this side and 40 on this side. So of these 83 acres, how much of this is pasture and how much of it is the woodland? Probably only like 30 acres of woods. It's all pasture. The farm does have a spring. Yeah. Okay. So the fresh water, we never have a lot of water, even though these are grain bins. Then all the meadows have those, see the concrete container down there, not filled there? Yeah. They're called water stations or hydrants? Yeah. So all the meadows have a hydrant, so little cows can drink from the hydrant. Oh wow. So there's no worry about getting water set up or anything? No, it's all gone. Okay. That's a big deal. Is that a dug well? What is that? That's a round bale feeder. So you put round bales in it to feed them hay outside. Okay. Yeah. Now what I usually see is, I see the farmers, they'll take like a four by four and they'll roll out the bale on the back of the four by four. So what is... I just put it in there and they kind of eat around it. Okay. So the bale... Okay. If you roll it out, they'll waste it. They'll lay on it and waste it. It'll be just a bunch of shit. It'll be garbage. Yeah. So in the winter, they mostly... I know. They kind of keep them in in the wintertime. Yeah. We have a covered barnyard, which is nice. Yeah. Feed them outside. Yeah. They exercise every day. Like 10, 20,000 a job for all of them? It was more than that, but I got it. We got it free because of the watershed. This is the milkhouse. Okay. This was built brand new like 12 years ago. This isn't really a good shape. Yeah. No, it's all built brand new. It's a mountain ceiling. It's all insulated. So you have a butcher shop and you just like a grocery thing? Yeah. We sell meat. So we want to sell dairy eggs and possibly... This is at the back corner, like an area for the vacuum pump. It makes everything work. I see. Okay. Sanitation sink, slop sink. So what makes you want to do raw materials? That's what my customers want. They want the raw grass-fed dairy, butter, cheese, cream, all that type of stuff. I've got a guy that was milked from cows. Because right now we can't find a processor to pick up our milk. So I have guys that are milked from cows that are just going out of business because they can't find somebody to buy their raw milk. Yeah. I could talk about that in detail too. There's 32 stalls. So that equals around 20. I milk Jersey so they don't make as much as a Holstein does. They're more higher in butter fat. Yeah. When they're grass-fed, what do they do? Four or five gallons a day? Probably you don't make as... Obviously this is grass, so you don't make as much. My sister was their milk and grass-fed only. I'm not sure what the difference. So it probably be maybe 20 pounds a day. So these are the stalls. I did take the pipeline down. The pipeline's here. But this is the pipeline the milk would go into that goes into the milk. I took it down and I was going to take it for scrap. Because I didn't think anybody would want to buy our place to milk cows so I was just going to strip it. But it's also here. I did... I do have that milk cow stuff kind of sold. I gave him a deposit but if it's something you want I could probably give his money back and give him 100 bucks to go away. But I did sell that stuff. So here's the gutters. The gutters... The gutters is what takes the manure out. It's like a... You can see the chain. You can see the end of it there. And those white things are hutches. That's what the calves are raised in. So this is like a conveyor belt? Yeah kind of. It's a barn cleaner it's called. So it cleans the barn. So all the manure runs cows down here? And then we back the spreader. There's a spreader you back underneath it to catch it. And you go spread it in the fields. I see. Yeah. And that's the calf hutches that we calves are raised in. Okay. Oh we got one left. You have a machine barn down there? Yeah. You said that blue thing was the... The water. Okay. What type of cow is this? Jersey. This is a Jersey. They have the higher richer butter fat. Yeah. This is only like a four or four or five hundred pound one right? Probably a quarter to seven. Oh is she? That's my uh... Her horror should be gone. I mean you don't have to get rid of the horns right? Well it's safer for the cow. They're so... She'll mellow if she won't bother you. Yeah. You worry about her getting rough cows and then get hurt by somebody else. I see. The cow. They should be cut off. They normally do it with a calf. They're not as big. They do it with their little nub. It's almost like a syrup. You make this one for your family? You make this one at all? Yeah. She's not a cow yet. She's still a heifer. Oh still a heifer. So I've never had a baby. Okay. So if you have a barn like this and you want to... Like if I wanted a milk some goat and sheep. Would you bring him in that barn and keep him separate? You probably could do... You probably have to do like a table. Cause I have a lady over in Franklin who sells raw milk. And she's just like 20 minutes away. She milks all her goats and sells. Cheese. Yeah. And raw milk. You probably want to do a separate area for the goats. Cause they're so little. You gotta have it a little smaller. Yeah. And that's over there is a horse barn. We have two horses. This is the horse barn? Yeah. This is the horse barn. So we have two stalls. Horses. This is the water room. So that's kind of where the spring comes up. The water comes up in the spring. Okay. So this is like a feed room in there. Okay. So this is... It's a dug well. It's like... It's basically clean natural water. Yup. Right. Cause like a spring box. Water box. Your kid's rider. Uh-oh. You guys are gonna... Is Frank gonna marry a crazy horse girl? I'll pass on that one. Oh, are they? One of my clients passed away down by Liberty. Yeah. So she gave him some... Parting gift. Yeah. She was... Her daughter said, We have a... There's a little paddock here. We put some sheep out here just because they're... We got them in these pads. Yeah, they eat anything. Right? Hey. They got uh... Those brambles all over them. I went to uh... I was at the... The beach yesterday and I got those all in my socks cutting me up. They got plenty of uh... They got plenty of wool to protect them though. Are these for uh... Are these for meat? We got the pads. We're probably gonna have them. This year will be next year. So probably would sell the babies for meat or keep a couple of them. Normally they have twins. One of these are like 80-90 pounds? Probably. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, probably. They're born this spring. They're curious? They're very curious. Yeah. The one on the right was bottle fed by us. So she's like a pet. Yeah. Just follows you around. The other two are a little bit different. We got from the college here in Delhi. Mm-hmm. They only do when you milk sheep. It won't go down if that per animal. Probably. The goat will do more. Yeah. We have a person that's gonna milk like 50 goats and they make cheese and so. I think you might better off just finding people to buy their shit. You think so? This isn't... This is gonna be quite a... It is quite an opportunity. It's probably gonna need to employ two or three people. And also being able to trust them. That's the next one. So to be here every day? Yeah. You're almost better to find a family to live in a house. Well, I was gonna come out here myself. You live here? Yeah. I was gonna come out here myself and do some of it. But I don't know, you know, since I don't know what I'm doing, like, I mean, I'm gonna hire one or two people. But I don't know how much, how involved I can actually be in the in the day-to-day logistics. Yeah. Oh, because like you know how to do all this stuff. You know how to like drive a tractor, fix the pipes, all that type of stuff. You gotta buy equipment. All right, we have something that we sell on the farm, bro. We don't have everything. We've kind of sold some stuff. Then hire people to do stuff. You're talking probably, if you bought the farm, you're gonna have another $200,000 into it to do what you want to do. Just to $200,000, $300,000, just to milk 20, 30 cows. To get it all set up and build your, because you gotta be able to get a bottle or your dairy has to mess up already? No, that's kind of what I wanted to ask you about. Beautiful. Beautiful. Beautiful. Beautiful. Now there's growing hemp. This 100, what is it, 140 acre property? One and a quarter. This 100 and a quarter acre property is twice as big as the 200 acre property I saw last week. So someone's lying. It's a big giant square, you know. It's just both sides of the road. But it's very compact. It's all right here. And this is, it's not tillable, but it's about as quality pastures you can get. Yeah. Right? Because you're doing grass-fed, you probably would do strips of grazing on all this. Yeah. And we would just bring in, if we needed silage or hay, we would bring it in. My main concern was, would we be able to get enough cows up here to process at a butcher shop? And what this guy's telling me is actually that they were looking to have a facility built in here for the town, because there's so many cows in the area, they have no one to bring them to. So I'm super excited. I don't think I'm going to find a property better than this, to be honest. Especially from the house perspective, because the barns, the facilities, that stuff is never going to be perfect. You're going to need a loan and grants to build that stuff. But the house is nice. It already has cable ran to it. Don't have to worry about business stuff. So we'll see how the next property looks. And then maybe we'll go see another one next week. But I have a feeling this one is going to edge the other ones out. Who knows? I'm open-minded. I'm always open to seeing what opportunities there are. But this guy that owns this property, he has a bunch of connections, knows a lot of people in the neighboring areas, the agricultural schools, the college. We can get everything hooked up here if we want to. And I don't see why we wouldn't. Because there's no Wi-Fi towers near in this area. I don't think they're going to be here anytime soon. And this next farm we're going to, which is about an hour south of here, I'm actually concerned that it is by this kind of resort area. So there are definitely some towers that I looked up and saw. But we might as well go take a drive down there and see because it's only an extra hour. So we're about three miles from this next farm. And unfortunately, I don't think it's going to work because on this hilltop ridge that's overlooking this area, there's this gigantic five-grams tower. So unfortunately, this little area is probably too high of a Wi-Fi frequency. So we didn't waste too much time driving down there. It's only about half an hour out of the way because it is kind of on the way back to the city. But I don't know when I'm going to tell this guy. I think I'm just going to kind of take a quick look around the property and then just leave because that's a deal breaker. You know, I'm not going to drive two, three hours out of Manhattan into Pennsylvania. And then there happens to be a cell tower right near the property. No, there's properties without cell infrastructure. And I think the reason there's a tower here is because there is this resort place that people might go to on vacation that's pretty close by. So that's another downside. And it's kind of close to a town. And we're at the other farm. I don't know where this guy is. Those are some big chickens. Maybe I'm just not used to seeing chickens or those are roosters or whatever. So this is a complete shack. I don't know what that building is. But this is like, this is ragged. This is a feeder. I think it's a bale loader. So this is where he stores the behemales because that's a bale loader. He's got some tractor stores there. I saw a guy riding the tractor in the field. I think it was Mo and Hay. So that might have been him. So he might be turning around and coming back. Got a little kitty right there. That's probably another outbuilding. I don't know what these tanks are for. He's got a horse trailer there. Old tractor. This is the main house. So let me knock on the door and see if someone's here. Yeah, he's coming right now. I hear the tractor. So you've never seen a camera like this? No. So you've been old school out here. Have you gone down to the city at all? Maybe 45 years. Oh, really, really. It's totally different now by you, I guess. Oh, no. I mean, I come out here. I look around. I have no idea what I'm doing. So I'm sure you feel the same when you go down there. Was it people all over by you? Well, now with the virus, you know the virus nonsense, right? It's all crazy. They're coming up here. Yeah, now they're coming up here. Now they're coming up here. How many cows do you have now over here? How many heads? All there's got to be 50 of them. Oh, you got 50? I've got a few in here now. So you've been here your whole life, farm's been in the family? Yeah, I didn't go too far. No, this is my grandparents. They were born in 1921. 1921. My father and my mother. And then after that, after my mom and my father died. You have a family now? Only brothers and sisters. Are you here by yourself or you have? Yeah. I put the kids up there. They went away this afternoon. So we're on the other side of this guy's property. That's where they are. This is where this guy's farm starts. And this goes all the way up back there. Yep, right through the barn up that way. It's almost entirely pasture, right? Yeah, that's what I did at home except for... Guys, I'm walking through this property. This guy's a complete character. I don't think I can get it because of the tower so close by. But we basically looked through the property. I'm like taking some pictures of it for him because he didn't want to pay a real estate agent to take pictures. So I'm kind of helping him out, doing him a favor. And we're towards the end of his property. On his neighbor's property, just taking some pictures of the outside. And his neighbor comes over. And these two guys are like old school out in the forest woods. They hate city people. And this guy was joking to me like, I'd rather be chasing women. I was like, I got to hire this guy because we both had the same thing in mind. Just lay on the beach with some Russian girls all day. But I'm going to take a... Just walk around the rest of the property. Take some pictures of it for him. There's not really much to show you guys. So this guy has about 50 head of beef cattle. And you can see a plane in the sky. His neighbor actually flies planes around. This has turned into such a weird day. This guy is like old school. He's in his 60s. He's like some guy who's lived on a farm his whole life. Doesn't have a family. And he's listed this property for like a million. The other farm he has is listed for like near 2 million. Some campers just showed up. They're walking up and down his property. He rents the property out for campers. I mean, I don't know. And this guy knows pricing too. I was offering to buy some of his beef cattle. And he knows that he's supposed to get X price for Angus because it's premium. And on Frankies we usually buy older dairy cows because we don't really have a market for the Angus stuff. But we could do Angus and just sell it for a little more too. But the point is this guy knows his prices. He knows his stuff. But the poor guy had a stroke I think some years ago. That's why he talks a little off. And his left hand is injured and he can't really move it. So I think that's part of the reason he's selling this property. He can't do all the work on it anymore. At this point I'm just here because I think it's interesting. And I'm helping this guy out by taking some pictures. Being a little nice and taking a couple hours out of my day. I'm already out here. I'm learning a little bit. I'm not even seeing what this guy's doing. The spring-fed ponds on the property are pretty cool. I've always wanted to have one of those. But this is like an old dump. The cows really graze all of this down. It's like almost not enough land for this amount of cattle. But he's got 50 head on 100 acres. So it's still working. So we're going to go and take some pictures of the barns and the houses for this guy. He's going to take me to his other farm and I'm going to take pictures of the land for him. Hopefully my camera battery doesn't die. We got the campers. They're hiking up that hill over there. Probably going to go in the woods or something. I think he's charging them like $80 for two nights for the family to camp out here. So yeah, it's not bad money. It's funny because this is kind of what you think of when you think of typical farm life. You have like a pan of water, some chickens walking around. Oh, we got some baby chicks over here. They look cute. We got some baby chicks. Those are probably a few weeks old. Yeah, I just like some cat wandering around, chilling. Like even like the stone pavement here, it's like so farm like rustic. Old barn. I don't think my animal noises are going to be suitable. Oh look, we got a little kitty. Just chilling on the farm. Yeah, this is definitely a... I'll actually take a look inside this. Oh man. So this is like... Oh man, I just stepped in a bunch of cow shit. You know, surprisingly I've been here for two hours and that's the first cow shit I've stepped in. So this is a milking station. God knows when this was last used. There's cobwebs on it. So the pigs got really only milk. Primarily milk. This is one lamb. Cutey. Another kitty. She looks at you. That's funny. That was a lamb. He's going to be a butcher in a month. He's big. He's like 120 right? Oh yeah, more than that maybe. There's a lot of wool but he's fine. This is the pigs. Hi Piggy. Hi. That's like second cutting and milk primarily. Now I've fed him some cornmeal. Now I started. What was the first thing you said on milk? The grass, the second cutting grass. Oh, they eat grass? Oh yeah, that's why I love it. You make that fresh grass ones? They love it. Do they eat hay? Oh yeah, yeah. Wink, wink. We should be giving these pigs some sun but they're still better than most people. These pigs are looking at me like they want to eat me. I think they do. New balanced menomins are not ideal for this scenario. I actually told myself, Frank, put on some boots. I think I'm going to feed him. This pig's literally eating the wood. He'll probably use to getting fed when someone comes in here. One point, one point. He's feeding the pigs mostly milk but he's probably giving them some convention for himself. This guy's got animals all over the place. I'm losing my mind. He's definitely not amused. Don't look at my camera. Don't you dare. He wants to smell me. He's a funny man. What does that chicken do? He's got all over the place. This is the guinea hams. Because you can't run off because they're wild. Oh, these are uh... I haven't seen these before. At least uh... What do you feed them? The corn? Now I do. You can boil eggs. Boil eggs? Second cutting what they do, they scratch their part. They scratch their part and they eat the leaves. The second time, okay. They want the guinea hams to be more protein. That's why they like leaves. You've got fresh grass which they like to release. And they love bugs because I can't let them out. I just got them. That's why we keep them in. They need protein and they love bugs. You keep them in because you're the one doing all the work. They're too wild. Because we've got foxes. I mean, how many hours a day do you work? You work 10-12 hours a day? I used to 16 hours too much. The big ones could get bigger. Small farms are caught. What is this? A souvenir? This is what you show the Muslims. They want to cut their throat. Yeah. So we want to change their brain set. Yeah. So you shoot them and kill them. So you won't get injured, okay? That you put them from eye to horn. Eye to horn, you put an X. This is where you shoot them with a bullet. Because they shot them down here. They think directly from there. They have no idea what they're doing. They probably used to slaughter a goat and sheep between the brain. So I have to show them. I turn it over and show where the brain is. It's up in here. Not down here. They shot them here and just wounded them. The Muslims to slaughter the animals? They're coming tomorrow to kill three of them. Oh, really? But the biggest day was the changes every year by the moon. They came in July 31, August 1. Market price? Beef at auctions? And that dictates corporate... But that's crap. Then they don't want to pay you more for the good stuff. Exactly. That's why I told them this market price. It's probably double triple market price. They don't want to pay. Then they should go buy that shitty beef. If they don't want to pay. Then they don't want to pay for quality. They just want pounds of meat. So what do they do? They shoot them. They court them and they throw it in the truck and they break it down further at their homes. They did all kinds of stuff. Quarters and load them up. They spent a couple of hours the whole day doing it. It would be afternoon for three steers. Yeah. They're sending them direct for slaughterhouses. And it's horrible because good milk and cows are killing them. Because they're not making any money on the milk. No, the farmers are losing their ass because milk is so low. And another thing is... Well, you're going in dairy or whatever but... DFA, you know, the Dairy Farm America. Yeah. They have the corporation and they control a lot of milk across America. They are building a huge farm. 50,000 milk and cow. 50,000 cows, can you imagine it? Where? Kansas State. Central... 50,000 cow facility. Where are they going to try to get enough milk for the whole United States? They're putting small farms out of this as they go to auction. Then they buy the best cows on the small farms. They're ruining and there will be no quality for milk. Those cows will be on cement. The milk will taste like water. That's just what it is now, New York. The markets in Walmart they did the same thing in Indiana State. Do you know that? Yeah, it's terrible. They're destroying pretty much all small businesses. They're controlling the food system. Yeah, I mean, they basically just they're taking control of the entire food system. Absolutely. They're taking control of the choice of where to buy food from. Exactly. And then if they want to buy food, if they come to someone like you, they're used to paying no money for cheap crap, but then they don't want to pay more. So, they're not even really... Yes, they're controlling the food supply, but they're not like directly saying you can't buy, they're just pricing people out. That's what they're doing. They're pricing you out. You can really hear those transmissions. I just finished up where the campers. I just finished a hill last week. Do you sell in the hay or you... I've sped it all from the cows. How do you just feed all the cows? There's no sales for hay because there's no cattle unless we're horses. Most people get rid of their cows. Yeah, there's very few cows used to extra money, but that didn't happen. Oh, these are the campers. So, they walk through your property up to here. Yeah, they can go up on hilltop because we just finished it so it doesn't hurt. Okay. This is his other farm. Really high up. Nice view. There's some campers behind us that I don't really want to get on camera, but you guys can see this guy's been bailing hay down here. He's got a bunch of equipment, but really, really beautiful farms. Really, really windy because we're on the hilltop. All right, guys. It's around 4.30. I stayed here way too long. We went around to the other guy's property. We took some pictures for him. Just enjoyed, learned a little bit about the farm operations, that type of stuff. So, definitely some thoughts to think about over the next few days, week or two, see what we want to do. Older guy, really nice, really sweet. He's lived on the farm his whole life. He's got, you know, millions of dollars on property. He's looking to sell it. Doesn't really know what he's doing from a business standpoint outside of pricing. Talked about a bunch of different things. I gave him some ideas. I learned a little bit more about the farm, the infrastructure, what it's going to cost me to do these things. I just feel kind of bad for the guy. He's just kind of by himself on the farm. You know, he was kind of talking to me at the end like, hey, I hope you come by soon. And he said like, well, he didn't say that. I really enjoy talking to you. I really enjoy, you know, it's nice because I feel bad. The guy probably hasn't spoken to anyone and God knows how long or, you know, because I'm a nice guy, you know, I'll talk to people about anything without wanting something from them. And he's probably used to people coming by and wanting stuff. Because he does have a lot of people come to that property. He does the hiking stuff, the camping stuff. He does the bunch of other stuff. But this property definitely isn't going to work. It's so close to the Wi-Fi tower. My cell signal is actually really strong. So there's definitely a Wi-Fi concern. And the facilities are just so out of date. You know, it might work, but this property isn't cheap. It's a million. And the other farm he has is over two million. And that $2 million, 200 acre property that he has, beautiful, beautiful, beautiful land. I would love to buy that and build a whole farm and, you know, butcher shop and everything on it, but I can't afford that. This is really close. It's about an hour and 45 minutes from my parents' house. So we're not driving like three hours into PA. We're really close into PA, and that's probably also why there's a tower nearby. But that'll be it. So thank you guys for joining me. I really hope you guys enjoyed this. I had some fun today, so hopefully you guys have a little fun too watching this. But I'll see you guys for tomorrow's video.