May 14, 2024

VIDEO: The Urban Farmer gets RURAL and OFF GRID!


▶️ Become a member: https://fromthefield.tv
▶️ Liberty on the Land on Bitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/UycAtU8ltPCO/
▶️ Online courses: http://theurbanfarmer.co/onlinecourses/
▶️ Sign Up For My Newsletter: http://theurbanfarmer.co/signup?

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

About Urban Farmer Curtis Stone:
Curtis Stone started Green City Acres, a commercial urban farm called Green City Acres out of Kelowna, BC, Canada, in 2010. 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.

___

Music commonly used on this channel:

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

29 thoughts on “VIDEO: The Urban Farmer gets RURAL and OFF GRID!

  1. For voles I recommend getting rid of brush and places where they can hide easily. Which means keeping the land clipped well. Cats are a good option, but most of the time other predators will get them if they have a hard time getting away. They do move to new areas when it is hard for them to live.

  2. Seems to me the rural areas are being cleaned up on using wild fires – make sure the trees and brush get cleared back from buildings. Also, have some water/hoses available for fighting fire. Even simple backpack sprayers are unbelievable in what they can do.

  3. Congratulations Curtis, beautiful land! Sure you will succeed in everything you do, wishing your good luck! Love all your videos, you are very inspiring, thank you for sharing and looking forward to see your progress.

  4. Have 24 acres in Goldendale, WA. Getting away to the country. Planning on doing some small-scale farming. Your videos have been inspiring and informative. Thanks for all the great content!

  5. you sound like a kid making his christmas list..lol.. so good to see that you have actually gone high up onto a mountain.. as..this is what i want to do .but . it seemed more practical and easyer to live on lower flatter ground.. but if you make this work.. it will be a great lesson for others to follow.

  6. I solved my vole problem by painting the lower 24 inches of the trees with low VOC white paint mixed with sand. The voles don't like it. I also use beneficial nematodes to solve the borer problem, especially with the peach trees.

  7. Voles are a nightmare in our vegetable garden in northern France. We planted shallots around the perimeter as I heard they don't like the onion family. They ate all 50 plants.

    They tunnelled everywhere and ate everything from the roots up. I put a 'Berlin Wall' of underground mesh and they somehow got past it and ate all our beets for the season. Glass jars on metal pickets do seem to have some discouraging effect on them, as for moles. Dumping a mix of garlic powder and chili powder down the holes seems to also help. I've tried flooding, no use. Dumped litres of human urine down their tunnels, not sure they noticed.
    Forking regular to break up their tunnels is supposedly one of the most effective ways to get them to give up an area. Do them all at once!!

  8. I'm loving what I hear, especially at the end; your intention to develop some sort of food forest while also leaving as much as possible of the natural flora. I'm just planning the same thing on the land we just bought in rural northern France. Rewilding mixed with food forest, plus an orchard, permaculture vegetable beds and a greenhouse.

Leave a Reply

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