November 21, 2024

VIDEO: Specializing in Small


Follow Vanessa on IG: @microyyc
B-Roll video by Bryton Udy – www.brytonudy.com | @brytonudy
Photo’s by Zandra Thompson – @lifewithzandra
▶️Sign Up For My Newsletter: http://theurbanfarmer.co/signup?
▶️Read my blog: https://medium.com/@urbanfarmercstone
▶️Follow me on Twitter: @FarmerCStone
▶️Watch us on Instagram: @greencityacres

Buy my book here: http://bit.ly/AllinOnebook
Use this discount code for $15 off: newsub

Subscribe http://bit.ly/curtisstonesub |
Watch more http://bit.ly/2rvW4h5 from Curtis Stone : http://bit.ly/2cmcFLe

UPCOMING ON-FARM WORKSHOPS:

Oct 15-19, 2018 – Selmer, TN – http://theurbanfarmer.co/product/selmer/

Curtis’ website: http://theurbanfarmer.co

Support through Patreon: http://bit.ly/2h050EF

DONATE TO THE SHOW!!
$5 – http://bit.ly/2hJxHUT
$10 – http://bit.ly/2hOFgth
$20 – http://bit.ly/2gPJrmM
Donate any amount – http://bit.ly/2h0KfKw

Watch More Curtis Stone:
How To: http://bit.ly/2s5KDv2
Vlogs: http://bit.ly/2trBmeC
Insights From Pros: http://bit.ly/2sfJRuc
Equipment & Set-ups: http://bit.ly/2sE3s9S
Q&A: http://bit.ly/2trCE9s
Crop Videos: http://bit.ly/2rvMcUw

About Urban Farmer Curtis Stone:
Curtis Stone runs a commercial urban farm called Green City Acres out of Kelowna, BC, Canada. His mission is to show others how they can grow a lot of food on small plots of land and make a living from it. Using DIY and simple infrastructure, one can earn a significant living from their own back yard or someone else’s.
___
FARM EQUIPMENT I USE:
Everything in one place: http://theurbanfarmer.co/curtis-gear-list/
Paper Pot Transplanter: http://paperpot.co/
Caterpillar tunnel: http://bit.ly/2gItRNf
Quick Cut Greens Harvester: http://bit.ly/1W3nLGb
Knife and Tool Sharpener: http://bit.ly/29DHlos
Jang Seeder: http://goo.gl/XGvJtl
Row Bags: http://goo.gl/eI1CLp
Insect Netting: http://goo.gl/rjyimK
The Coolbot | $20 off!: http://bit.ly/2l6DhEx
___

Music by: https://artlist.io/Curtis-38762
Music by: Biocratic – http://birocratic.com
Music by: The Muse Maker – https://soundcloud.com/themusemaker
Music by: Sweeps – www.soundcloud.com/sweepsbeats
Music by: David Cutter Music – www.davidcuttermusic.co.uk

29 thoughts on “VIDEO: Specializing in Small

  1. I like these interview style videos Curtis because it helps motivate, inspire, and educate viewers through entrepreneurs personal experience. thank you sir& thank you Vanessa:)

  2. This young lady is awesome, you can see she has a passion for what she is doing. She is a great interview, she makes and keeps eye contact with Curtis as she listens and answers with experience and knowledge. Then she is thinking and looks like envisioning the answer, and very animated as she does so . Vanessa is awesome.. thanks for the great interview… kinda jealous of her.. she is living what she is loving.. and i work at Costco (not THAT Costco where she buys her shelves, that would be awesome, but im in NC).. not a passion but a good place to work… maybe someday.

  3. Great video. Very eye opening. I think micro greens would be a great entry way, or gateway path into farming. Short turn over, Decent market. Thank you for sharing. I appreciate your effort in producing this video.

  4. If you're getting like tendonitis and lower back pain from this kind of work, it's because you're actually not very healthy. You might want to try ketosis. I work 12 hours a day doing extremely repetitive 5000 to 10,000 actions on about 18 to 22 of my joints per night operating heavy logging equipment. I have absolutely no pain no soreness no tendonitis, despite being a guitar player a computer gamer in a 12 hour per day logger holding two joysticks moving them around and smashing 20 diff buttons.

    Pre keto, sore all the time
    Post keto, never sore.

    Oh yeah, you look like you're hardcore vegan. Stop that. That's another reason why you're not able to handle such simple and easy work. I know people might think it's more work than I'm saying but I do 20 times this work 12h perday everyday for months at a time and never have any soreness.

  5. We are considering building an indoor grow farm in western New York. There is such a high demand for fresh produce here in the winter months, and I don't like the long drive to the store. I'm very concerned about how much plastic I need to use. Have you found any alternate methods of growing or packaging that doesn't require the use of so much plastic? There is just too much in the environment. I really like the raft grow method but all that foam and plastic turns me off. God expects me to be a better steward of His creation than I have been.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *