I run a small farm. I have animals. I don't use antibiotics or vaccines or herbicides, pesticides, chemical fertilizers (I use manure straight from the animal's butt to ground).
I have about 20 cows and I should be able to raise 10 steer a year for sale. All grass-fed. One steer should feed a family of 6 for a whole year. You can get half a cow. Costs are CHEAPER than buying at the store, and it's MUCH higher quality than anything you can buy. See, I have very little inputs, just my labor, hay, and some protein supplement in the winter (made from cottonseed meal / soy beans and some minerals).
I am one of THOUSANDS of people doing this all across the country. We are pretty much everywhere. You'll also find people running row crops (corn, soy, and pretty much everything else) in your area.
How do we find each other? I don't know, but I know that farms that have been doing this for a few decades aren't looking for more customers. Somehow people are making the connection and they're getting their farm products into people's freezers.
What do YOU need to do? It's really, really simple. Start looking for local farms. Start talking to local people who know the farms. Visit some farms. Ask questions. Ask them who they know doing what. We all know each other because we talk to each other all the time. I can tell you exactly what my neighbors are doing because I see them almost every day.
A really, really easy way to start is to buy a cow, or half a cow, even a quarter cow. Find three more families. Invest in a chest freezer. (They're extremely efficient and cheap.) Find a farmer who raises cows, and ask him if he or someone he knows sells finished steer, and where they get them processed. Expect to pay about $2,000 for the animal and about $1,000 for the processing, more or less. (Probably more nowadays, but prices will go down soon.) Split that four ways and you only need about $750 for about 125 lbs of meat.
The meat will last at least a year in your freezer. Half will be ground beef. The rest will be roasts and steaks, as you ordered the processor to do it.
You will NEVER go back to store bought meat.
Heck, I brought in some of the ground beef I bought to feed my workers on their breaks. They said those burgers were the BEST meat texture and flavor they've ever had, bar none. Too bad I can't sell it to my customers. (And we buy the highest quality patties we can find -- never frozen, 100% angus, american raised)
Start making plans now. Start talking with friends and families. You will not regret it!
And this is only step 1. Once you've got your beef supply, find someone selling lambs for slaughter, and learn how to do it yourself, save yourself the expense of a butcher. It's really easy. I'd sell my lambs at about $200 a pop, and you'd get something like 40 lbs of meat from it.
Chickens are super-easy to raise yourself. It takes about 3 months from start to finish for meat birds. Start with the Freedom Ranger Color Yield. I had really good results with them. Egg layers are super easy too. My family processed about 100 meat birds in about 6 hours. No plucker, just fingers to pluck them. Those birds disappeared from our freezer FAST.
I have about 20 cows and I should be able to raise 10 steer a year for sale. All grass-fed. One steer should feed a family of 6 for a whole year. You can get half a cow. Costs are CHEAPER than buying at the store, and it's MUCH higher quality than anything you can buy. See, I have very little inputs, just my labor, hay, and some protein supplement in the winter (made from cottonseed meal / soy beans and some minerals).
I am one of THOUSANDS of people doing this all across the country. We are pretty much everywhere. You'll also find people running row crops (corn, soy, and pretty much everything else) in your area.
How do we find each other? I don't know, but I know that farms that have been doing this for a few decades aren't looking for more customers. Somehow people are making the connection and they're getting their farm products into people's freezers.
What do YOU need to do? It's really, really simple. Start looking for local farms. Start talking to local people who know the farms. Visit some farms. Ask questions. Ask them who they know doing what. We all know each other because we talk to each other all the time. I can tell you exactly what my neighbors are doing because I see them almost every day.
A really, really easy way to start is to buy a cow, or half a cow, even a quarter cow. Find three more families. Invest in a chest freezer. (They're extremely efficient and cheap.) Find a farmer who raises cows, and ask him if he or someone he knows sells finished steer, and where they get them processed. Expect to pay about $2,000 for the animal and about $1,000 for the processing, more or less. (Probably more nowadays, but prices will go down soon.) Split that four ways and you only need about $750 for about 125 lbs of meat.
The meat will last at least a year in your freezer. Half will be ground beef. The rest will be roasts and steaks, as you ordered the processor to do it.
You will NEVER go back to store bought meat.
Heck, I brought in some of the ground beef I bought to feed my workers on their breaks. They said those burgers were the BEST meat texture and flavor they've ever had, bar none. Too bad I can't sell it to my customers. (And we buy the highest quality patties we can find -- never frozen, 100% angus, american raised)
Start making plans now. Start talking with friends and families. You will not regret it!
And this is only step 1. Once you've got your beef supply, find someone selling lambs for slaughter, and learn how to do it yourself, save yourself the expense of a butcher. It's really easy. I'd sell my lambs at about $200 a pop, and you'd get something like 40 lbs of meat from it.
Chickens are super-easy to raise yourself. It takes about 3 months from start to finish for meat birds. Start with the Freedom Ranger Color Yield. I had really good results with them. Egg layers are super easy too. My family processed about 100 meat birds in about 6 hours. No plucker, just fingers to pluck them. Those birds disappeared from our freezer FAST.
if you have money, i'd highly invest it in land if you want to live far away from niggers and jews (because the countryside has no welfare offices or public transport, which niggers sorely rely upon)
and yes, once you tried grass-fed beef its extremely hard to go back to store-bought butcherslop meat
though i usually buy imports from Argentina (where they feed the cattle with pampas grass, since it is cheaper for them) and if not argentina i make sure the meat is at least recently butchered and not vaccum sealed in the fridge for weeks
i particularly like tenderloin cuts, but i settle for ribs (good for stews) and brisket, sometimes sirloin it all depends on the freshness and my mood (how many euros do i want to spend on eating meat, while the rest i'll have to relegate to tomatoe sauce, seasonings, frozen garlic/onion and extras like Thai curry, low carb oatmeal pasta etc)
its a good tip to just buy a big ass freezer and put the meat in the freezer, but remember even frozen the ground meat can only last a few months (like 2-4) i highly suggest you DO NOT ground the meat and freeze it, ground it prior to cooking
do this and you'll be min-maxing your food supply for years to come, another good tip is to invest in tupperware, i have a bunch old sets i bought off ebay (as brand new) and i use to store the leftovers of my cooking, doing that can reduce waste and keep fully cooked meals just ready to heat on command
if you can't find any "original" tupperware just settle for the glass knock offs, as long the seal is intact it does its work.
I don't care about losers who can't even manage to put some money together.
> grass-fed
It's not about grass-fed. It's about not sending the cow to a feedlot where their meat absorbs the smell of manure.
> though i usually buy imports from Argentina
Argentinian beef is practically American beef. A lot of cattle ranchers go there because of the Pampas.
That said, they have to get their act together. They just shipped us a bunch of cows with screwworm. Screwworm is NOT hard to get rid of. You just irradiate a bunch of flies and since they only breed once in their life, if they breed with an irradiated fly they go extinct. It's not rocket science. We've been doing this since the 40s. It's why we don't have screwworm.
> its a good tip to just buy a big ass freezer
Check the numbers. Chest freezers are extremely efficient. Standing freezers are not.
> remember even frozen the ground meat can only last a few months
Not true. The life for frozen beef is at least a year. After about 2 years even people without a sense of taste can sense something is off.
> tupperware
Just learn how to use mason jars. There's a reason why they are expensive. They are absolutely worth it. If you take care of them you'll be passing them down to your great-grandkids.
It's a trivial matter to put beef stew in jars, or just meat, and seal them. That meat will last through nuclear wars.