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Yummy.
Now here. With the amount of cows that they have to feed at a facility this big.
It takes a lot of feed. Now this stuff is what you call silage. Now what this stuff
is, is young grass. When it's young it has more protein content. The important thing
to know about this stuff is that everything, everything alive has growth hormones in it.
Naturally occurring growth hormones. And it all ends up in that manure now naturally produced
growth hormones, don't be scared of that stuff! I mean that's what really gets things rockin'
and rollin' in a garden. It just, WHOO. You're gonna, wow, my garden, it's growing, right?
Plant's gonna love this stuff. The big thing about steer manure is enzymes which when that's
in your soil it just starts to make everything else in the soil get available to the plant.
Growth hormones is what's gonna make, why one little plant stays that big and why the
one next to it goes, takes off. Gotsta get me some of that stuff in my garden! Ok, so
here we are now, we're outside of the, the feed mill, cause they have a feed mill on
this facility here. The silage, though it's got a lot of protein doesn't have a lot of
calories. These big ol' silos are full of grain right? There's carbohydrates and more
protein in grain and they take that and mix that with molasses and other feeds that make
this rockin' and rollin' product right? And then that's what's gonna go into the pens
over there where all the cattles are and you know what's coming out the back end the stuff
that we want. And it's gonna be full of all the nutrients that the cows couldn't quite
get out of it. We're gonna end up with that over at Way to Grow. So next we'll go take
a look at the pens here where all the cows are. Ok, now as you can see. There's a lot
of cattle in this place. Now you can see, this stuff is nasty as it gets. You can see
it's just this pasty... Stinks like hell. Kind of like that smell really. So this is
all gonna get cleaned out of here and then it goes back into the compost pile. Everything
goes in here. Every time they took a good... they take a dump or a pee, it ends up here.
This cow manure here when you see all this cow manure it's just scraped up with the loader
as it is. Now these are.. These are feed cattle. They're gonna end up on your plate real quick
right? But there's nothing used on beef cattle. They don't, they don't wash them soaps and
detergents and disinfectants, they just keep it clean with machinery. Loaders, scrapers,
keep the manure out of here right? But in a dairy barn, at Way to Grow we don't use
dairy manure because they have to constantly keep, you know the *** on a cow, they've
got to keep washing it with... and there's detergents and disinfectants because everything
is for milk. And all that ends up on the floor and in the manure. Right? And competitors
have an easy access to dairy manure because dairy farms are all over the place. But feed
lots, well there's only three, I believe, in the entire province of BC. And I'm the
only guy that buys from this feed lot. So I know that none of my competitors are using
beef cattle manure. Right? And that's clean. Woah this! Now that is gold! This is what
you're after. Look at this stuff! That is rich. Rich rich rich, nutritious. It is full
of of of, essential nutrients, vitamins, enzymes. Everything that you want to feed your garden
with. Your produce. That will grow you a crop that you can live on. This puts vitamins in
your vegetables. This you want to feed to your family. If things ever got ugly, people
that know how to use this to grow produce, you can keep a family alive in Armageddon.
Now, here we are. This is the compost pile, now, all the manure comes out of the barns
and it comes over here and it gets piled up and then they, with the excavator, you flip
it, you introduce oxygen, air into the material. That's all the bacteria, they're working on
the stuff, like breaking it down even further. Now we're gonna head over there to the big
shed where we take this stuff when it's finished. Stock pile it in there to keep all the rains
off it in the winter. This is, this is nice footage. Now what's cool about this facility
is it wasn't built as a feedlot. It was built as a... in the second world war, for growing
and processing flax. For parachutes. And they used to take the flax in here and extract
the fibres in all kinds of vats and tubs and they would all be shipped down to the states
where they made parachutes out of them. These guys took it over and converted it into a
feedlot. Once we've finished the composting process we load it up into these big ol' sheds
here to keep the rain and stuff of it. All the nutrients are still there. Everything
you want in the product is right there. Pure. Pure manure. Nothing weird. Nothing to be
scared of. Just good old stuff to make things grow. And remember, growing is fun. You shouldn't
be looking at growing plants like it's a bunch of work and I've got better things to do.
I can go golfing and all that kind of stuff. You can put a couple seeds in this stuff.
And you'll make life. And then you can eat that life or you can give a nice little flower
to your wife, or your mistress. Keep everybody happy. And it's just a beautiful, look at
that. Isn't that sweet? So now you've seen where cow manure comes from. Hope you get
a little better understanding of it. But in the end, right? Ends up in a bag like this.
Damn strong bag, right? But you can see it's a beautiful flowing, right? Just, it's not
a greasy little *** like you saw back there in the pens. It's a beautiful, usable, workable
product, right? Nothing... There's nothing nasty with this stuff. Easy to work with.
Smells awesome. From butt to barn to bag. Way to Grow. Damn good ***!