Rancher and Carnivore for OVER 65 Years! (You Won't Believe Her Age!) | Rancher Maggie
This interview features Maggie, an 82-year-old rancher from Whitehaven Farms in Alberta, Canada, who shares her remarkable story of living as a near-lifelong carnivore and raising ten children on a meat-based diet. Born in 1941, Maggie dropped out of veterinary school to pursue ranching and has spent over 60 years in the cattle business, eating primarily what she hunted and raised - venison, beef, fish, and dairy products, while never purchasing sugar or regularly consuming vegetables.
Maggie details the realities of ethical cattle ranching, explaining how cattle live most of their lives on grass before spending only 120 days on grain to develop marbling. She emphasizes that properly cared-for cattle can live 15-23 years when kept as breeding stock, with her own cows like "Chatty Kathy" living to 23 years old. The discussion covers the biological importance of ruminant animals in maintaining soil fertility, as 80% of what cattle consume returns to the land as nutrient-rich manure, creating a sustainable cycle that synthetic fertilizers cannot replicate.
The conversation reveals critical challenges facing the North American beef industry, with 30% of cow-calf producers in Canada disappearing since 2002 due to unsustainable economics. Despite land values reaching $2-3 million per quarter section, ranchers cannot generate enough income from cattle to cover costs, forcing young ranchers to seek off-farm employment. Maggie warns that without addressing these economic barriers, the growing demand for quality meat from carnivore dieters will face supply shortages as primary producers exit the industry.
Key Takeaways
- Living carnivore for 60+ years while raising ten children demonstrates long-term viability - Maggie ate primarily venison, beef, fish and dairy without vegetables or added sugars, maintaining health and energy into her 80s
- Cattle spend 18+ months eating grass and hay before finishing on grain for only 120 days, gaining 4+ pounds daily while developing marbling that provides essential fats humans need
- Well-cared cattle can live 15-23 years as breeding stock, with proper treatment being economically essential since stressed or unhealthy animals don't gain weight and bankrupt farmers within one year
- Ruminant animals return 80% of consumed feed to soil as manure, providing essential minerals like selenium and copper that are depleted from farmland after 100 years of crop production without animal input
- North America lost 30% of cow-calf producers since 2002, with land costs reaching $2-3 million per quarter section making cattle ranching economically unsustainable for new entrants
- Young ranchers cannot earn living wages from cattle alone, requiring off-farm employment to survive, threatening long-term beef supply as carnivore diet adoption increases
- Feedlot cattle require pristine nutrition and careful management - power bills alone can reach $1,500 monthly just to heat water tanks, while feed costs during drought years can exceed $45,000 for small 100-head operations
- Older cattle (10+ years) produce more flavorful meat than young grain-fed beef when cooked properly at low temperatures (190-200°F) for 12+ hours, providing superior taste and nutrition
- Lifelong Carnivore Rancher - Maggie's Journey from Montreal to Alberta
- Raising Carnivore Children in the Canadian Wilderness - No Sugar, All Meat
- The Economic Crisis Facing Cattle Ranchers - Where Will Your Meat Come From?
- Rumen Biology and Grain-Fed vs Grass-Fed Cattle - The Science of Digestion
- The Financial Reality of Cattle Ranching - Why Young Farmers Are Quitting
- 80-Year-Old Carnivore Couple Building Sailboats and Colombian Coffee Farm
- Land Prices and Meat Economics - Why Beef Costs So Much at the Store
- Raw Milk vs Homogenized Milk - The Hidden Problems with Processing
- Soil Depletion and Cattle Manure - The Essential Role of Ruminants in Agriculture
- Eating 14-Year-Old Bulls and 23-Year-Old Cows - The Ethics of Using Every Part
- Methane Taxes and Government Barriers - Political Threats to Cattle Industry
This is an auto-generated transcript from YouTube and may contain errors or inaccuracies.
Dr Anthony Chaffee where we discuss diet and nutrition and how this affects health
and chronic disease and show you how you can use this to optimize your health and
happiness both mentally and physically all right hello everybody thank you for
watching this is uh another episode of plant free MD today I have a very special
guest Maggie who's from Whitehaven Farms up in Alberta Canada and she has been a long time
carnivore nearly lifelong carnivore and raised several kids as carnivores and has been you know
working as a as a Rancher for decades now thank you very much Maggie for joining us you're very
welcome Anthony I'm very pleased to be able to talk yeah well thank you and it's um you know
we've been conversing over you know previously before we say record and then over emails and
so I've I've just been very fascinated with your story and how you you came to be the person
that you are and your experiences and I would just love to pick your brain about that um can you tell
us just a bit about yourself and your background and what you do and how you how you first came
about uh just eating meat well born in Montreal um 1941 so I'm getting up there I don't
even think about that but uh our family moved West in the 50s and uh I ended up in a
private school and graduated from there and went to UBC to take veterinary medicine because I
thought that's what I wanted to do and I decided at UBC because it was in the 50s and and um
there were no women vets at that time and I don't think anybody suffered from that I don't
think women suffered from that but in any case um I decided I didn't want to look after other
people's animals I wanted my own and I come a dairy farm after my dad got home from the war
um with the vla ACT he got a dairy farm and I just fell in love with cows basically fell in love
with cows and dogs and horses at the same time we farmed with horses in the 40s and uh yeah so I
grew up riding on the backs of the workhorses as plowing or spreading manure or whatever and that
was the life I really wanted so what the hell was I doing in UBC like like spending money trying to
I was working at the racetrack um and at Hastings Park in Vancouver and uh and then exhibition
part until they found out I was a girl I was actually I wanted to buy I'm tall and skinny
I'm five foot ten and strong as a horse and and yeah it looked like about like a 14 year old boy
I guess and I was 16 17. and um I had a license to to work to hot walk and get him that I worked
for Eddie Yates and the Diamonds and then the commissioner of racing brought me in and she and
I said he said give me your your ticket and I said yeah and I put Max Hillary which was my dad's name
which was my name was Maxine and I mean I'm Maggie but my name was Maxine and I said max Hillary
and he said that you're a girl yeah cowboy hat on because I'd spent the summer actually working
for Douglas Lake Cattle Company uh which was um owned at the time by Colonel Spencer before chunky
Woodward bought it and uh I was actually working at Green Acres Cattle Company which was owned
by by Colonel Spencer and his daughter Barbara stole yeah I mean I actually met a cowboy
there and then so I dropped out of just I was a total Dropout after two years if UBC I
couldn't handle the the crap in University I'm sorry but I mean there was so much BS going
on even then it's way worse now but however um they produced people like you which is amazing
I mean not that they they do who you are but you know what I mean you can cut this
out Anthony if she's fine however um that's what So I Married one of the Cowboys
from there and we went way back in the bush so all of a sudden now I'm eating what I always
wanted to eat as a kid I didn't like vegetables I didn't even like fruit and in the 50s we didn't
have the variety and we didn't have the kind of sweet apples and this sort
of thing that had almost been um modified to take taste a lot better I mean
we had crab waffles on the farm and that's we never had any fruits that weren't in in season
and we're talking Canada there isn't a lot of growing season and there isn't a lot of fruits
and vegetables that we grow here I mean we don't do anything really well excepting you know spots
and turnips and onions and stuff like that and you know what I didn't really didn't like them and
if you eat things try eating them just plain just you know grab a potato and take a chunk out of it
see what it tastes like uh yeah I guess a carrot fresh in the garden is is okay uh but without
the butter and the gravy and the sour cream and all those things everybody puts on which I don't
like Anyway accepting a lot of butter I used it take potatoes and then Mom would put lots
of butter on it I would eat the butter and leave the potato you know so this was a
problem at home because I was skinny and so um our general physician said oh sure well
Maggie will have a better appetite at supper time if you give her half of Guinness dope
before supper well I learned to like get missed out so my mom put an end to that because
they didn't like vegetables and food so I ended up getting married as a teenager we go way
back in the bush I'm not going to Garden like we eat what we shoot what we gross
all like blue gross rough gross um duck in the fall uh dear moose two kinds of deer there
was whitetails and and muellies up there moose um fish from the creek there were times when I
mean I know what hunger is my mom would have her hair would have been curled she'd known because
the family I came from wasn't broke I chose this life because this is the life I wanted to lead I
I'm I like the adventure I liked I like the hills I like the nature and I tend to be a very solitary
kind of person which may show up a little bit in my rough way of saying things so pardon me I'm
I'm about that but however I'm watching what I see um that all came about and of course I ended up
getting pregnant I was by myself when my first and he didn't make it and I don't know really why um I I honestly can't tell you but I was 19 going
on 12 you know at that because I never really had chat never given myself a chance to really grow
up still having trouble with that why 80s however um I eventually did have I had ended up having
three babies back in the bush and I nursed them all because that was easy there was no we had
no phone we had no power we had no running water it wasn't you know and Winters are tough even
back in the Hills North of Kamloops you know so they went from me to eating venison
my oldest daughter had never tasted beef until she was 10 years old and I told them
I said now this is be this is what we raise and you might not first fight they were used
to venison all kinds of venison including moons and salmon sockeye salmon coming up you know
all the way out from the Fraser River to the Thompson River to the boulevard River to Dead
Man's Creek to crisp Creek where our Ranch was and uh they would come up there they would be
pretty beat up and we'd shoot them and pick them up in the creek and if you couldn't put your
fingers through them we ate them there was times when life was tough and the cows you know if
it was a drought year they would come down not into great shape and the deer we took nine deer
off the mountain one year just to keep ourselves dead we didn't have any Refrigeration so you
know they were put way up into the top of a a big ponderosa pine out of the blue flies in the
summertime and you just peel off what you need and I had a lot of help from a little lady at the in
in the um we were the first White Ranch past the Indian reserve and and she helped me a lot with
making dried meat and a little Ricky up and stuff like that so I have to try by venison that was
cooked and smoked and dried and my kids teeth on that like this is what they ate and I didn't have
to Garden I didn't the the uh indigenous fee they call them indigenous and somebody asked old Alice
who was just a darling she was like and uh she would take me up and we'd go take hushenberries
and that if you'd ever had hush and berries there um High Bush cranberries and they smell like dirty
socks but when you cook them up and you get the the juice from them um vitamin C and so her kids
if they got a cold they had to take work and she'd give it to me too and I give it to my kids and
they hated it you know but that's what they they would get and they very seldom got sick but the
best thing to give a baby is a I don't know like we make jerky ourselves and and it's great and I
give it to a baby to John I wouldn't put the pain but they would pound berries into it and my kids
cheeked on that stuff and they had I give them the ends of a bone and they gnaw on that best
thing ever for a baby that's trying to get their teeth to break through the gums you know so my
kids didn't really have any problems like that and then I would cut the meat up really fine and
they went into their mouths whatever they wanted and I never had anything in my whole life
since I left home the age of 17 . I've never bought a pound of sugar ever in my life ever
ever ever it's not in the house you look in our fridge this no there's no there's no
vegetables around here there's all kinds you know this morning we had we had steak we had
a calf we don't eat a lot of good beautiful young beef that I absolutely love because it's worth
too much to us and this is the point of me getting in touch with you you're the only one that ever
picked up Anthony bless your heart is that we we want people to eat meat and get healthy and get
rid of their diseases and be strong and we want the children to have the brain power and all that
you need meat okay so you get everybody you and and the rest of you guys that are willing to put
yourself out there you get everybody eating meat where is it going to come from I've
mentored young Cowboys young Ranchers uh there's five of them that I can tell you right
now and every single one of them have said to me I don't know how long I can do this Maggie I can't
afford it I'm not making enough money one of the kids that I sell Bulls to mentoring him and uh he
finally got married I was so happy oh the first year off she gives him twins and she was his right
hand man on the farm he would go to she's calving out the cows and now she's got two tiny babies
and now she's got another kid and then damned if another kid I was helping with exactly where the
hell the twins come from you know well you eat meat you're gonna have more babies that's just the
way it is I guess but the thing is that how are we going to if there's no cow calf man there's no
backgrounder there's no feeder there's no finisher there's no truckers driving trucks to get those
cattle to Market there's no abattoirs there's there's beyond meat and meat substitutes and
and all I hear is these people are saying well I know meets good for me and I feel so
much better but I feel like a murderer like really these Critters wouldn't even
exist we love our cows I can tell you the two oldest cows and I've been in this
business for six years okay over 60 years now um 23 years old yeah they were named I had
all these kids they would name the cows you you want 150 head of cows they're going to
name every damn one of them chatty Kathy and brownie both live to be 23 the average age of
a beef cow like your your dog and your cat is 10 or 12 years old okay that's the average
life of a beef cow they have to be kept fed absolutely a pristine diet not the crap that most
people in the city could feed their dog and cat because those dogs and cats could live to be 15
16 18 19 like ours do because they're fed meat they're not fed this food they're carnivores
but cows are not carnivores so we're saying oh it's bad to feed them grain oh excuse me if
there's grain out there the deer and the Moose are eating it whether it's Wild Oats put on here
by the Creator or if our tame oats or what kind of grain we're eating those wild animals will be
in there they're not going to go foraging onto um what all kinds of fescues and stuff in the fall
when they've got grain to eat and they do amazing things with that grain because well hunting on the
Prairies you're getting grain fed moose and green moose or browsers you give them a grain field
you know they'll eat the Grain and they'll put on white fat and it's absolutely amazing you know
I'm sure they'll go back and eat in the swamps but this is what they're that's what their rumen is
for and if you look at the physiology I mean I did get University if you look at the physiology
of the cow this is a miracle this huge rumen or a moose or a deer or apparently a camel and I
mean I don't never eaten camel or giraffe or any but they're ruminants they chew their Cuts
this amazing vat that all the glasses and the grains and all stuff goes into and the bugs in
there eat it they have a um a biological tank going on in there and the bugs now this is a lot
of things that people don't understand is that that animal raises the bugs in the rumen now if
you don't have the bugs in the for some reason rather too many antibiotics because the cow got
sick or or whatever or something happened and she lost her cut as they say then the only way to get
that cow back into shape because it can't digest the food without the bugs is to put the bugs back
in the room and now at UBC we had our tree in those sewn into the side of these lumens on these
cows they were fine yeah and we'd open them up and we'd pull us oh it was ranked pull that stuff
out and put it into another cow or tube it in like put a tube in you might have to make sure you
get it past the epiglottis and down into the rumen because that's the only stomach you put that stuff
back in and away they go again so it's the bugs in there and it's actually the bugs whether they're
grain bugs or hay bugs or silage bugs or whatever kind of Bio form that's in there when billions and
trillions and quadrillions of these that is what who the reticulum that makes the cut the omazum
all of that and gut it's the bugs when they die that the cow gets her fishing from the point is
that 80 of what you put into a cow or a moose or a deer comes out of the back end and that that
is the only way we can keep our Fields with both tilt full nutrition full biological matter
it is gold that manure is gold if you can graze your cattle out there it's a beautiful cycle
if they're in a feedlot oh by the way when a feedlot animal goes in he's about 18 months of
age 18 months to two years of age he spent his whole life eating grass and hay and silage just
like every other cow just like every other moose deer or whatever this is all a green stuff
that we grow the last 120 days he goes in and his green ration is increased just like it would
be for the deer if they get into your barley crop and they can help elk or brutal they can just
wipe out what they call it like a hail storm but those animals go into this with the lot
they get up to a 70 75 grain ration in the last the 60 days 60 70 80 days they're gaining four and
a half pounds a day and they're putting marbling in their flesh we've all the frame is already
there that's what you do when you background the calf after it's mean it goes on to grass and
then it gets backgrounded with silage and they're gaining frame growth it's not a fattening ration
or a finishing ration but they go into this 120 days of their life and they're living the life of
um any better than any pet that's locked up in an apartment in the middle of town because if they're
not happy and contented and cared for they don't and the margins are so slim in this business
if they don't Thrive the farmer the Rancher the feedlot operator goes belly up and he will last
maybe one year that's it you can't put it away in the garage go and do something else and then
come back and start farming again that animal has to be fed if it has no value at the market and
you have to buy feed and nobody else can afford to feed it because maybe they've had a drought
too you think okay and now feed instead of being a hundred dollars a big round bale is
now 250 dollars a big round bale and that's gone in one in one day you know I
mean during the drought year before last or extra feedback five thousand dollars and we've
got a very small herd of a hundred hat okay forty five thousand dollars just to get them there
we couldn't sell them because nobody had feed to buy them so this is this is the only industry
that you can't go on strike can't put on hold but these animals when they say Well they're they're
factory farm oh yeah farmer and see how well you do with the cow you know that weighs 1400 pounds
and she bursts a calf how much of a factory farm do you think this is a Hands-On industry this if I
sound passionate and intense Anthony it's because all of our people who are suffering now
70 of North Americans wait unhappy they don't even like the look of themselves let
alone do they feel good or have the energy and you're going to get them on me bless your
heart you and Sean Baker and Ken Berry you're going to get them on meat they're going to
feel better where's the meat going to come from because I can't convince these guys stay in
the business because they can't feed their family and keep their calves alive you know in a in
a ice storm like so and my husband who is MBA and looks at the cold hard facts and figures
he said Maggie the only we are going to ever be able to keep the beef available waiting for
the world to catch up when you guys get through telling people what they need they're going
to turn around and say well thanks a lot where's the beef it's not there it's not that's
not beef it's all about this you've told us all about this but where's the beef well I'm
sorry there's no beef because the guy the primary producer the cow calf man that has to
be there every time that cow goes into labor or needs to call of that to save that cow's
life laughs they're done they're done they're not going to stay in the business I've
got 10 of my own kids not one of them is farming my youngest daughter has half a dozen
cows in our herd and she comes out she's a school teacher she comes out once a week and helps feed
and we just love her dad takes her into the shop and she builds stuff and you know and it's
great but she's not she's not farming because she can't feed her she's got three kids
these are my grandkids there's no money in it there will be people that will will
are willing to make this a lifetime project because they love cows they love the horses they
need to work with them they love their cow dogs they they love being out there on a tractor
putting up hay for our six months of brutal we have in Canada they're willing to do that
they're willing to be up there just like mac and I are before we came down here to you know I
did run a comb through my hair okay yeah I mean I do have I don't have a lot of Pride I don't
care about that crap but the the point is that I was just so excited this morning when
I realized that we were going to do this because now I just want to dump this problem that
we have about how are you going to take this on because you're going to because I can't do it and
you know how to do this Anthony you know how to explain to people that not only is carnivore the
only we are carnivores okay so you want to put the other crap in your body that's fine you're going
to have aches and pains but you're not going to have the the I mean it's not a great thing for a
woman who wants to walk around in a bikini Arnold Schwarzenegger Okay so I don't I don't care about
about that but people want to be healthy they want to be strong they want to feel good when they
want get up in the morning they want their brain to work they want to remember things and at 80 I
feel like like right now Mac and I are approaching middle age but we've just what we've yeah okay
that's fine he's 67. I'm 82 and February the first we've just bought a little farm in Colombia we
went down there because we're building a sailboat in our shop because Mac wants a sale he's a sailor
I took my license and went down five days first holiday ever five days down the coast went sailing
on a boat to learn how to sail because I said I'm not going sailing around the world with you ever
until I know how to feel you know so that's what we did this summer August 1st to the 5th my
daughter came and looked after the whole place bless your heart and then we decided that where
are we going to put this boat he's he'll be finished 32 foot catch okay and uh he worked
all over the world in his life and we got a a motor from fellow in Bangladesh who took apart
uh um Lifeboat send it to us we it's a diesel It's a beaut diesel twenty seven hundred dollars
delivered into our shop went into the this boat is going to be sailing in two years and we're going
to sail it down to Colombia so I said well I don't want to live on the beach in some touristy place
um can we look for maybe a little cabin in land close Columbia because it was cheaper
you can't afford to go to Panama or Mexico anymore then you know to put that on
site we found this little 13 Acre Farm there so came back talked to the banker borrowed the
money we got to make this pay you got to make this pay this is a family farm down in Columbia we fell
in love with the family and they said well can you can you please take it over their dad had just
dropped dead three day three years ago and it was only 60 years old and he had all these projects
going and the boys had their one lives in Bogota and other lives in man as Alice and we had to
learn Spanish for God's sake so we've been doing that over the last year right now because nobody
speaks English down there so down there and this family they lowered the price for us and um and
the Columbia peso dropped to the Canadian dollar so I went to the banker here and he says you
guys are crazy and I said well maybe but can we do this put another mortgage on the farm we'll
we'll manage it somehow we're doing so now we've got the Thousand coffee plants going in there I
don't drink coffee now I do okay might as well he says coffee's okay I don't know about
that you see I don't really care about all the intricacies of the diet and that
I know it works for me and if I anything that doesn't agree with me I my body tells me okay
so that's like um you know an 18 year old going out having his first drink or maybe his first
um what do you call like a talk or something I don't know it doesn't work very well well this
is what vegetables do to me one apple okay um a cracker with figgy stuff what
did we have the other day fig Jam and okay the next day yeah I still have to go
to work I still have to build rain buckets I still have to check cows I still have to we
have a had a little Aura uh RSB thing going um through there you know at a rhinocyticial
virus is well we have it the line has the same thing they're not it's not zoonotic you don't
worry about it but it goes through kids the same way as it goes through calves and we didn't
give shots because we took off to go to Columbia see the farm and fell in love with it and signed
the papers and when we got back the weather had just taken a dive so the cats didn't get their
vaccinations and we had half a dozen you know go through with this didn't take off social virus
which of course can't heal with an antibiotic but whatever they you have to be there it doesn't
matter a fake jam and it reacted on you this is what I'm saying there is no paid sick sick paid
no days off there's no holidays there's no like what do you think you can take a long weekend
off Christmas we sped it up in the feedlot we're supposed to go for supper to my daughter's
place that didn't happen we had a freeze okay so there was no Christmas this year it wasn't but you
know what our animals are good and we still laugh we still have fun we still love what we do but
now we got to pay for this Farm down in Colombia and uh we'll do it because we know we can but the biggest joy for me this morning was when
I really realized that I can dump all this [ __ ] Onto You Now fix this Anthony you've got the you
have the you'll have to probably cut this out you have the um podcast you have the know-how you
know you look like a freaking Greek god so like you're gonna catch all the young girls that aren't
happy with what they look like and they're going to say okay here's this guy out there that
looks like this and he's eating meat and it so do you see where I'm going with this so
I can forget about this and concentrate on helping Matt Bill finish this boat still do our
100 head of cows and our background feedlot and all the other things because we put up our own
feed you'll have to see we still have to harvest we had a hail storm go through wiped out half
of our barley you know this year but you know we have to Mill barley and it doesn't matter
if it's minus 38 with a 20 mile an hour wind blowing you still have to set up the mill you
still have to get the tractor going you still have to and by the way we hand fill our buckets
with grain with chalk out of the green wagon like they weigh about 28 pounds a piece and then we
load them into the back of the Gator and go into each pen and distribute it in seed troughs and
if you've ever seen cows when they get a taste for barley boy but when the weather gets like
that they need that extra they need that extra they need the cardiffs they're they're need
the carbs and to keep your animals strong and healthy it's amazing what seven eight pounds
of grain rolled barley will do for those cows a lot of people have lost a lot of stock
in this last six weeks of hellish weather so this is what I want to do and my husband is
just so wanting my brain to get back to where we have all these projects going now on the farm
in Colombia we raise bananas plantain mangoes what else avocados oranges lemons like I've never
seen an orange on the door they're Valencia and and and you know if people are willing to
eat them that's fine but coffee I'm I'm drinking coffee now learning to like it I actually
quite like it it doesn't seem to be bothering me but I've got a cast iron that so you know
I mean I've eaten a lot of sometimes trips a lot of iffy iffy me I'll I'll just put it
that way but you know when you're healthy um you don't get gut problems you
just you don't you know your gut is hard and it's and it it's just there to
I don't eat I don't live to eat I eat to yeah and like sitting down at a table we got this
is a big table this is eight foot eight foot table here and when it when my kids are home there's
like 50 people like when they're all come with their their kids and their kids are having kids
now my I got great grandkids that are in school so you know but and I know I sound
like I got diarrhea of the month but it is that you and Sean Baker and he actually gave
a podcast this morning that just tickled my fancy because he was talking about the life cycle of
a cow you have a lot of people you've convinced that carnivorously but they have that one
problem with the ethical part of eating meat and I'm telling you now that we waste nothing
here nothing we have stock ponies that are like we had had a 35 and a 33 year old we
still got the the 33 year old mayor we put her sister down the age of 35
that mayor you could load a moose honor go hunting bring a moose back on her we put
her down did we throw her body to the coyotes no there are some animals that we can't eat if we
have a loss the coyotes get it we've got a great um dog that live here they have never once
touched our calves we had to get rid of some that took one year took seven of our baby
calves these guys are great they live here they get extra fee they keep the mice in
down the Gopher population down foreign there is no way I'm would let any kind of meat any
kind of need go to waste so old cheeky ended up in the freezer the dog food freezer and
bless her heart no way chewing on her bones yeah so this is the sort of thing that maybe
your people need to know what real life is and the importance of honoring and respecting
these animals like every other Rancher that I know Anthony if you don't love cows and you
don't love business this it will kill you one way or another and you know
what your bones will be coyote ciao and you there will be a nickel to bury you because
it will break you and it will break your spirit if you don't love it and if you don't
respect these animals and I don't know who doesn't love his cows and he doesn't just
thrilled to see those baby calves out there and for as long as they are meant to be on this Earth
whether it's two years of age or 23 years of age they are cared for fed looked after cherished cherished or who would get up at
three o'clock in the morning and go out and and check when it it's just bitter cold to
make sure those animals are okay and and that the cycle of Life continues and Skip
Christmas entirely Christmas Day boxing day it was just solid work for us but it's
a labor of love and yeah we're we do we do fairly well actually because we don't buy
anything we don't need like we keep our bills we don't go to restaurants we don't go out we
don't travel our first travel ever was to Colombia you know and and it was absolutely amazing
like that's the first time I've ever been off the continent and I'm 80 something you know
so um and and now we have another job down there so with that I'm passing this burden
of how the heck are we going to keep in this business and how do I keep all these
kids I'm mentoring in this business going without any hope of them ever making a living
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what are some of the barriers to that I mean has it always been like that has always been very
tough margins you know the prices of meat have gone up significantly but it you know it doesn't
sound like that's actually getting to you know the level of the ranchers it sounds like other people
in the middle are the ones profiting off of that so what are some of the the barriers to you guys
being profitable or new Ranchers coming in and being able to earn enough of a living to make
it worthwhile well the barriers to us right now is that the land is so expensive I mean right now
the the quarter section that the home place is on I had two other core two others still have another
quarter uh and and that it's worth on the average well this place because it's got a house on
it somewhere around three million dollars it's only worth what I can raise on it for me
the other quarter that's bare even though it's got two Wells on it uh and it's got power
to it it's worth million two million and a half you're not going to pay that back in
cows so you're going to put it into grain and the problem is is that fewer
and fewer people are eating beef the the big uh stores and that they they everybody
has to make a profit all supply chain okay when you go into the store and I look at what's
in the in the grocery carts and then she's then this lady who's maybe 50 pounds overweight
and she's got two beautiful children although they don't look all that healthy to me but their
basket and she looks like she's packing the cares of the world and she's maybe all of 25 years
old it breaks my heart and I look in her basket and I look at the bill that she's and I mean I'm
right behind her and this has happened more than once this is I don't care what grocery store
you go into and you'll see what they're paying 250 dollars and she has no food in there yeah
there's no food in there if she'd taken that 250 and bought meat with it wow beautiful girl
you know sitting somewhere around 180 hundred beautiful girl young two beautiful children and
she's got no food and she just spent 250 300 dollars she's got pop in there she's got chips
in there she's got kelos corn flakes in there I mean I've got to name all the the crap she's
got in there but there's no food in there yeah there's maybe a Frozen pack of corn yeah like
or maybe a head of lettuce you want to eat that rather food go ahead but I'll I'll bet people
when she gets home she's gonna put a 2.50 worth of something out of a bottle on there or she's not
going to be able to eat that last no that makes it worse what people don't realize as well is that
when you actually like you know check it like per pound of lettuce of spinach of these vegetables
quite a lot of them are more expensive than beef you know especially certain types A dollar an
apple yeah you're an apple an apple yeah or more sometimes yeah or more like it's it's absolutely
criminal and it's crazy and they're taking their money you know and and they're buying margarine
instead of butter um that would gag a maggot so like I eat a lot of butter because I grew
up that was all I wanted to I wanted the meat and I wanted the butter that was on the on the
table and so this this problem of the Rancher the cow calf producer and there's a lot of
them they're quitting yeah they're turning their land they're either renting their land out
or they're selling they're selling out to some American or some rich Saudi or some rich Chinese
person or some rich Dutch person that's going to run a dairy okay and that's fine but the
problem is with with milk there's nothing wrong with milk there's nothing wrong with even
pasteurized milk but as soon as you homogenize you know the difference between whole milk and
that's been homogenized and milk that hasn't been homogenized the cream the globules in the
butter fat in the milk that will make butter will rise to the top which is the way milk
when it was delivered at home back in Quebec um it Rose to the top didn't bring it in
it would freeze and then the neighborhood cat was licking it off the top because it was
pure you know so when you homogenize it to keep that those fat globules in suspension
they have to be broken up so small but they almost literally can go through the walls
of the intestine seriously that fat even though it's butter fat which would be awesome for you
which I will eat butter by the Spoonful uh and I eat cheeses all I love cheese and and butter
we have a huge you should see our supper table when we're eating I mean it's just amazing like we
have all kinds of stuff on there no no plants but I never gave my kids homogenized milk I had a milk
cow until my last kid left home that was it I made my own butter and yeah so they add whole milk you
know so but as soon as you homogenize it's not the pasteurizing but people who talk about raw
milk no no no no no no you don't have to drink pasteurize it we did because we had our own cup
okay and they used to be used to be able to get your milk cow tested for TV because TB used to
be a thing you know I come from I was born before antibiotics work developed and they were developed
during World War II okay there were no antibiotics for people or babies when I so yeah they had your
cows were tested for tuberculosis and brucellosis okay because those were zoonotic diseases so but
as soon as you take this milk and you homogenize it which made it better lifetime better shelf time
because once the cream comes up it gets gum on the top and leaves didn't like that when they took the
cap off the bottle you know so they homogenized the milk you can't buy milk where the cream comes
to the top now so have it pasteurized if you want used to be always pasteurized since Louis
Pasteur invented that you know a long time ago but the Cream came to the top on the bottles
that were being Dairy the Cream came to the top and then they homogenize you can't
buy that anymore unless you go to a Dairy and by the way it's against the law
for your local Dairy to sell you that Raw but the reason is and you know this full well is
because the corporate world the big food industry they don't want you bypassing them so here's the
problem with getting beef from the Rancher yeah by the cow take it to an avatar get your name a
cow a you know if you went to a Rancher and said with if I bought a towel and paid you to raise it
would you do that for me and then when it's ready will you deliver it to a Slaughter plant
an abattoir there's abattoirs all over North America little avatars they're not allowed
monologue by law to kill animals on their place so they would have to come and do that this is
the way we do it we have a wonderful butcher one cow or bull at least every year goes
to feed the people in the mustard seed and I called our local abattoir guy that comes down
and does an emergency Slaughter on the farm and I said okay we have a bull with a broken leg our
freezer was full I look after my family first but then try to make sure that an animal instead of
just taking it to the market if it's past its time I get them and he takes it and put turns it into
hamburger for the mustard seed and I asked him one time this is this is how sad this whole process
is I asked him how long how long did that bull you took last time last at the Mustard Seed because
every Sunday he was going and serving meals at the mustard tea days Maggie what's the Mustard Seed
starving yeah so sorry what's the mustard seed is that some like custard seed is a it's a line
for life that's to feed the Homeless right okay but but this is what's happening in our
country and in yours too in in North America there's people dependent on and what
are they getting at the food bank they're not getting yeah a little
garbage yeah you know they're getting yeah so it you see I mean we've got one small
chance to to get this straight and I'm trying to I'm trying to give you all the information I
possibly can from all these different angles I want you to take this on Anthony please I'm
trying to yeah I know and I know and here you are still the brain surgeon like even sean
does that now he's not I don't think he's doing surgery anymore I don't think he is still
is but you know if you want something get done ask a really busy person so unfortunately yeah and
you're the only one that got back to me anyway Sean is I think he's he's so talk to him what
whatever it is it's solve the problem of the way peace about eating beef I know I need to eat meat
I know I need and lamb and pork or whatever or chicken but I feel like I'm doing the ethically
wrong thing I think it's wrong and it's not because if we don't have this animal
input on our land our land to be we'll have to put more fertilizer on it more
chemicals more of the things that are like glyphosate is not the sort of thing you want on
your brain people say eat green eat seed oils and yet they don't want to eat the beef that's raised
on grain like did you give your head a shake you know seriously I I don't get the connection it
grains so bad why are you eating it and serving it to your kids it's cow feed it's horse feed
it's sheep feed it's hog feed it's chicken feed turn any one of those animals loose on the left
where they bothered Oh They'll bust your fence down to get into that barley that's what they're
supposed to eat the deer are hopping over the fences they don't have to break the fence the cow
can't get get through get into there so we fence them out because they destroyed Harley crop yeah
well this is these are the problems and we keep the young men who are and women who are willing
to be the primary producer because if the feedlot doesn't make money he can't buy the caps the guy
that's raising the Calves if he can't sell them enough to at least buy feed for those cows and
then go out and have a part-time job so we family and pay his mortgage you can't buy land around
here this land this has been in the family for almost 100 years now wow so not my family but
my my husband I've I've lost I lost husbands don't tell me the cattle industry won't kill you
Mac and I have been married five years this man is amazing he is absolutely amazing and he's willing
to come on this journey and put up with all my crap and my cows he used to run the feedlot
he's done there isn't anything he hasn't done and and now he's taking on so you know I need a
break I I it doesn't matter whether I've earned it or not I don't care about that that kind of
stuff and I don't even care about money but I gotta pay my bills and this Farm is going
nowhere because I have a grandson who's now six foot five and he's just turned 16 and he's
going to go to college first because he won't come here to take over he's got some cows
here amazing kid and he want he loves cows so his dad who's a wedding farmer is saying uh how
are you going to make any money you go to college first and learn how to be a mechanic because if
you're going to have cows you're going to have to go and out to work in order to feed those cows
because I'm going to do it even if Nanny gives you the farm so how do you like them apples yeah you
know I mean be angry with my son-in-law for that Max's he's telling him the truth you can't make
a living raising cows or chickens or Hogs very very fine line and certainly not cheap people who
have sheep Farmers always have a husband who's got a full-time job I know Sandy Brock go on hers
she's got 250 her husband works full time okay that's crazy yeah she's got a million dollar
outfit there that he's also got to pay for because it's beautiful making it possible for her to run
250 had to use by herself with one hired Hammer I can't even afford to hire a kid to help me and
there isn't any kid want to do the job that I do my daughter I'm going to Colombia for two weeks
and you're coming to the farm she's got three kids and the husband at home and she's a school
teacher and she did bless her heart she did so now you know somehow we got to make this work and
on top of that this thing going around in my head about how do I convince Dr Anthony
chafee to take on this other mission of explaining to people why it is not only ethically
right to eat beef and pork and that but it's oh to keep the land fertile otherwise our land is
being sterilized by chemicals and the wrong kind of fertilizer and no tilt you just keep Mining and
Mining and Mining grade five chemistry chemicals can either be created or destroyed elements
okay so if there's selenium in the soil okay and you're putting sulfur in pick up sulfur
before they'll take up selenium even if there is selenium in the soil okay copper where are
you getting your copper from do you know that do where are you getting your selenium from an
adult male needs 400 micrograms of selenium every day if we didn't feed that to our cows we spend
six thousand dollars a year on minerals from because it's no longer in the soil on this family
farm it's only been mined for a hundred years only been mine for 100 years paw took the weed
off and it went somewhere where where to go I don't know China the states wherever but but
their poop after they ate the wheat didn't come back and go on to the land not like animals
do you put it through the animal it goes back in 80 percent of what you put into that animal
eighty percent of that six thousand dollars a year that goes through our 100 head of
cows and our calves goes back onto the land do you see we don't need to put not even
nitrogen fertilizer on there or cows all nitrogen you know chicken chicken manure from
these so-called factory farms ever walked through one of those factory farms there's bad Farmers
everywhere Anthony there's bad parents everywhere but if you're a if you treat your animals
properly you'll have the law the SPCA the FIA that everything against you and you could be prevented
from having animals for the rest of your life you're a bad parent you feed your kids
crap and you beat them up nobody takes your kids away they try to help you
okay I mean that drives me crazy that whole scenario that where where is this
balanced and furthermore these kids wouldn't be badly fed and they probably wouldn't be getting
beaten up if they're parents felt better like seriously it comes right down it's not just
a physical thing it's a mental thing I mean I mean if I had time I would like
to go back to University and then I think what the hell would you want
to do that for because it's all crazy now you know I mean I can learn more
online in the last year I've learned Spanish like we're having so much fun with this Duolingo
on online and talking Spanish in the house and the kids are just said mom you're
just weird and I said well you scared mom builds character so just get over it so this
is the whole thing I put a lot on your plate no um well you know I've I've seen
this so sorry go on just dump you I can write I've written books okay you
know what I've written three books and I've never published one because I don't write
for that I write for me and then move on because life is so full of Adventure and
every day is it's like a freaking gift you know to do stuff with yeah no your neurological
search I don't know what you call it yourself but you're you're dealing with the the most
intricate areas of the of the uh nervous system and now you've taken on this job and now I'm done
a bunch more on your plate you know so um yeah I'm not going to apologize for that I just want
you to be able to do it and make you can do it I will do anything in my power because if people
get your message about carnivore eating and health they also need to have the pressure put off
of them about the ethical side of it and the Damage that so-called damage that the animals
are doing to the land they're not doing the damage they're an absolute essential part of the
because we killed all the Buffalo that wasn't somebody that is alive spot that would just happen
200 years ago they're gone from North America and cows have replaced them but we've lost 30 percent
of our cow calf producers in Canada since 2002. one third are gone and the other two even in the
Cattleman's magazine on the cover is Cal cast is the cow calf industry worth worth it are we paying
our bills okay if they're not then neither is the feedlot isn't going to survive well I mean all of
this down the line and then there's going to be no B so a lot Dr Chase Now where's the meat yeah
okay so I just dumped all this on you and and now what are you gonna do yeah well I'm you know
I'm gonna yeah it's um there's something I've noticed as well you know you're right it's um
I've seen some things in Australia as well the abattoirs here they actually cannot bypass them
you cannot bypass the you know the big sort of corporate producers of meat you are not allowed
to buy um you know beef or lamb directly from a farmer in Australia you have to do a sort of
under the table you have to know somebody in in America you can you know so I bought uh cow
directly from the Rancher and you can do that if you go through a butcher you can do that
as well in Del Source the cow but if you go directly to a Rancher it's even better you have a
you have a better choice you're dealing directly with them they do better for it and you do
better for it's cheaper than going through all these successive middlemen and I've tried to
do that here in Australia I've not been able to um sometimes you can if you know somebody they can
sort of Slaughter it there and then you just sort of take it away and sort of as a cash deal but
it's not actually you know legal and sanctioned so um yeah and um as you have to go through
an abattoir here um the reason for that is because big business doesn't want that to
be possible yeah exactly and understand that yeah people have to buy the point is that
you don't have to from the Rancher to get an ethically raised beef all the beef is ethically
raised yeah yeah because if it isn't the farmer would be broke in two years because the cows
contended wouldn't be healthy and if they're not in the feedlot in that 120 days if they're not
gaining four pounds a day that guy's going broke and he's any million dollars worth of facilities
there you know how powerful is in the winter servicing a dozen hot water tanks so that all
of my and have fresh water to drink so they don't have to eat snow fifteen hundred dollars a
month just for the power bill to heat those tanks because I don't have a river that I can get them
down and chop ice with yeah let my cattle think out of a river so this is the thing you don't
have to get it straight from the farmer there's no better and is sitting right there in your
grocery store and not only that the beef that has spent the last 20 days eating a Perfectly
Natural 70 grain that you're feeding your kids by the way who are carnivores 70 grain ration for
these uh long long yearlings for 20 days and they marble and it it tenderizes the beef and it gives
the consumer the fat that they need there's times Anthony where I just put solid fat from a cow
with butchered because they don't marble their meat a 15 year old cow has not got marbled beef
but she's got fat on her because she's well fit so the fat is deposited kidneys just like a guy
that could be skinny and still have a good big belly it's because it's got all that fat in there
well it's still in a cow that's still healthy fat I will put that in the frying pan and just
cook it up and just eat that because if it's minus 30 with a wind chill blowing it could
be minus 45 with the wind chill that's the temperatures I have to work in and I need that
60 minimum of my diet is fat it's either beef Tallow done in a frying pan bacon or butter
and then it's be because we don't eat that AAA beef I can't afford to go and buy it in the
grocery store so we eat we eat all cow yeah summer and I had to explain it to the kids and
this is this is a bit of raw life he was 14 years old his name was reserved he did his job from for
12 years the last year of his life the last summer year before last he had one cow disservice and
three heifers he serviced how and he serviced two of the heifers winter we had and the kids wrote
on him like like my little grandkids would just go and climb on him he'd come up to the fence
and age scrub and they'd jump on his back and he'd wander around and my little granddaughter
who would be about seven or eight at the time you know she just sit on him for ages so in
just you know it was a good babysitter and he and he would come up for pets and all of this
sort of okay turned 14 and that last winter uh we got a really bad cold snap it went down
to almost minus 50 and an old bowl of 14 can't shrink his scrotum up like the young bulls
do they pull it up in cold weather all kinds of straw is scrotum froze halfway up and in
the spring I took my kids out and I said okay kids this is what Reserve is suffering
is this road and fell off and one of his testes was literally dragging on the
ground and I said come on you know you I want to feel like this just happened and I
told my daughter I said bring the kids over because Reserve this is this is not right this
is not right you can make an animal suffer for for yourself if if you if you want
because you love it so much but there is a point where reality has to be and
even said okay nanny you know and that was okay you know every one of us here my daughter
my husband and me and those three kids all shed a tear because we reserve it come
to the end of his line you know and he so much and I you know I've still got a bowl
working in the herd with one of his sons and I've sold Bulls out of my breed also sell bowls that's
part of to other ranchers because I know I spent my whole life indenting or reading the perfect cow
and Bulls that are for whatever you have if you've got heifers to breed you need a certain kind of
bull you still need to have production calves but they've got to be able to birth them they're two
years old when they have their first calf and that calf has to slide out Like a Torpedo or you've got
problems so I can breed bowls like that and I've sold them and the kids that I've mentored in the
business have bought bowls for me and I made them deals because I I want them to be successful this
is like it's when you see kids being successful is There's No Greater Joy There's No Greater Joy
in life than seeing kids I don't care they're my kids or somebody else's kids but when you
see kids you know being successful and they're starting young families there's no nothing brings
you great Greater Joy I don't care where you go that that is the ultimate Joy is
to see this anyway Reserve ended up being made into I had 1700 pounds of hamburger
freezer 1700 pounds not one bit of that is being wasted my kids are all having they all know it's
reserved they all love that bowl they've all got videos and being on like even my oldest son was
my um well I met what's my oldest son he's 50. 56 now my oldest boy and and then my youngest
boy he was 40. no he's not I can't remember my grandkids come they have to wear
name tags and say who their parents are you know it's just ridiculous but you know they
understand the real life this is real this is reality and 98 of our population in North America
totally removed from reality lost their hearts their souls and their spirits and do you wonder
why depression you wonder why 35 of the kids that graduate from our high schools are on prescription
drugs you wonder why there's an epidemic of ADHD and depression in five-year-olds you know if I didn't feed cows properly if I didn't feed our animals properly
not only wouldn't they wouldn't Thrive but they wouldn't look healthy and they were healthy
I said I think I sent you a picture of me in in the yard the other day in a snowstorm with my
arm around a tan cow I don't know if you got it or if it went through it's 66. I can ride
on her yeah she's a miserable [ __ ] you know and she's given us how many calves how old is
she uh 66 w x y z a b c d e f g h there's no I okay J K next year's L all the tags on the cast
will have L on the tag that's everybody like in Canada has all their calves would be something
a number and L they will be 2023 okay so how old is she she's 14 years old and she'll stay
in the herd maybe another two years maybe usually they're gone by the time they're 10 or
12. in my hurt because I breed for longevity because that's super important you don't make a
dime on account until she's had her third calf figure that out kept her so you didn't sell her
so who's going to pay that bill okay you kept her mom for a whole year while she was pregnant
and fed her and now you're keeping the Caps you're not getting any money for that you have
to wait years before she has a calf something has to pay for the bull that you had to buy
to breed her and all the feed that she's had before she's given you calf number one okay
so she's two and a half before you can sell and that just paid for her that she was that you
didn't sell her not all the stuff that's happened before or after and then she has her second Cafe
for all the stuff in between now she has a third cap okay she's five years old now she's five and
a half before you've made one dime on that cow so making sense do the math it's easy math so
this is this is the whole thing so you don't think by the time that cow is you know nine
or ten years old you're not in love with her and you've treated her well so she's calm so
she isn't going to kill you when she has her calf because some cow a cow will cows are more
dangerous when they have their first calf if they aren't gentle and they feed it properly
they will protect their calf with their life against you if you haven't treated them properly
those are just facts and every cow guy knows that you don't go in there yelling and
screaming at all this yeah yeah no no that doesn't work with cows I don't
care if you've got a thousand mama cows or ten something pretty big branches
3 000 headed mama called All of Us and you love them they're not all named yeah
well you have enough kids they'll name them all that's just the way it's with kids you know
they're just they'll name everything they'll name chickens we have the three Golden Girls in
our hen house you know they've all got names so so if um have you ever just just as an aside
um have you ever so you have the hamburger have you ever you know had like an older cow and just
like had them cut up in stakes and things like that I did that once with a 10 year old cow
best steaks I've ever had in my life dude's best tasting meat I've ever had yeah yeah
that because that's what we eat and I can make a ghost in fact did get some of the cuts
from Reserve made into those 14 year old bull uh we didn't meet Chatty Cathy by the way she was
23 and everybody was crying when she died she died with hot water bottles and blankets on her she'd
just been and she died with a four-month-old heifer calf at her side at the age of 23 and
that calf stayed in the herd for 17 years but nobody in the family will forget chatty
cat we didn't meet her besides she had just gone downhill over the last three days before
she died but however yes I've had 14 year old Bowl roast okay put it in the oven cover
it with bacon strips because it won't be much fat on a roast especially if you're
going to do the loins or that covered bacon back to back bacon all the way across
the top your oven I like my beef rare I eat most of my beef blueberry and this is
old beef okay so we use a lot of bacon and a lot of towel to to put the fat on the top
put it in at about 200 100 anywhere from 190 195 to 200 200 degrees put it in before you go to
bed at night in the oven just leave it and wake up in the morning you'll smell your
kitchen will smell like roast beef and then at about 12 hours after at between
175 because 175 internal temperature is rare but it's rare it's pink all the way through
okay the Bacon's on the top you'll smell bacon and you'll smell roast beef and there's your
breakfast and it will be tender and it will be so delicious and you will have brought
honor to that 14 year old animal yeah like yeah I absolutely loved it I thought it was it was
probably the most um flavorful that I'd ever had I tried like normal steaks like just from you know
like like prime steaks from Costco and I tasted next to it I did sort of a taste test I you know
took it by the of the of the the prime New York and it was amazing really good and then I had like
the 10 year old cow also the New York and it was just so good I kept sort of eating that like half
of that like okay I'll try the other one now and I couldn't even taste it I couldn't taste any of
the beef flavor it was completely overpowered I did it just tasted more rich yeah it's a it
loses it you know it's um as as uh some person that um I was speaking to said we've sacrificed
texture for flavor you know or sacrificed flavor for texture you know saying oh it's a bit more
tough if it's older I didn't actually find that I found that it was perfectly fine like if you
overcook it and you cook it sort of medium well well done yeah it's like a hockey puck but
otherwise it's fine and like the gristle and like the tendons and things like that oh those
are just like whale bone I don't know what those things turned into but like those are those are
tough but it's even easier just to take that gristle out now because it's solid now you get
rid of that and you just have this soft fat and the soft meat as well so I think the best thing
in the world that that bristle too because they will chew it up and they need that and and uh you
know you're what they feed dogs they no wonder um that will tell you the average lifespan of a of
a retriever is nine to ten years yeah you know try 17 18 years yeah it used to be yeah 19 years old
still going you know my little girl she's outside now past she's eight and um she wouldn't she's at
night time is when she wants to cuddle but uh so she's outside and it's cold out there but she's
tough and they eat meat they actually have the horse meat and and this is we waste nothing yeah
and if I shoot a deer or a moose nothing is wasted so as far as the the um middle meets I only like
um liver calf liver um but we we do eat if well we had a cast that got out and got hit by a truck
and smashed his leg and I I got him back in and in into the fence gosh only knows how I don't
know whether somebody gone through the gate or whatever but anyway that's what happened to
him and uh so we butchered oh we only weighed about 600 pounds and he didn't have he had fat
on him because he was still nursing you know um I think he was about what five months old
or something in a good solid calf and uh we butchered him out and the meat had absolutely no
flavor in it and there was no no marbling because deals have that marbling it doesn't have the
flavor or anything like that we're not wasting it by any stretch of the imagination and we did
eat the liver and the the tongue and the Heart yeah but when that's gone I mean that's that's not
necessary it isn't it it's it's a nice additive with um with eggs like if we have what we call
[ __ ] eggs they're they're just like a soft a soft scrambled eggs we'll put for mac and me a
dozen eggs goes in we we do that we have bacon and then we'll have liver and that that's a super
super breakfast it's just another variety to have but you're absolutely right I mean I don't mind
that we have weed I feed only I literally can't afford to buy um these fancy rib eye steaks
that Dr Baker talks about or you know I mean we don't have an off-farm income so this is
it you know yeah if you don't pay into it you don't have it and as a farmer you can't see you
don't have it in the end so there's basically no no pension you know it's all right and that
that's not why I keep working though it's not that's not I keep working this doesn't work this
is life this is living but I'd like to see that you're going to convince kids to be there and do
the job they need to get paid for it and I don't know I don't know how we're gonna do that but
the more people eat beef and demand and get off of the junk food and stop spending and wasting
their money on the crap in the grocery store and just demand the meat yeah yeah I think that
that's I think that's a very important part of it is just getting more people aware of this and
aware of these problems and then just you know you know uh making noise you know you make political
noise you know there's a lot of there's a lot of barriers uh in the way and and things are becoming
um more difficult they're getting these you know the the fake plant burgers they're getting the
bug Burgers they're investing billions of dollars into this sort of nonsense and that's because they
wanted to return on investments so they're making a lot of noise they're putting a lot of uh Lobby
money and things like that everyone says like oh you know big big cattle and big beef all they're
they're doing there is no big beef there is no big cattle it's ranchers like yourself that are
doing this and then um and then these other giant multinational food corporations that um that are
uh you know that make more money out of the fake meat and the plant-based crap than they do out of
anything else and so it's just a matter of getting people aware of this and and picking up that
demand and if that demand goes up and these people say like okay hey look the money's on this side
of things we're losing money on this well they're going to either wise up or they're going to lose
their their shirt so and hopefully hopefully both um you know but there's there's crazy things going
on politically as well you know a lot price of land is going crazy I don't know if you have to
pay property taxes on that that would be insane because you know as the price goes up you have
to pay more taxes and so you basically have to you're renting your land from the government which
was never a thing and five thousand dollars a year just well that's and that's you know um yeah which
is ridiculous and like in California they had to cap it I think it's prop 22 or something
like that where they they basically like you pay property taxes at the at the value of the
house that you bought um but as you know because because it was it was taking people out of their
homes with people being there like my grandmother um was in uh you know Montecito California just
in Santa Barbara and a beautiful property it was like 10 acres there um you know Steve Martin
is one of her was one of her neighbors Oprah Winfrey was down the street from her this became
a very very very valuable area and so if she had to pay taxes on what it was worth when she was
in her 90s she would never she would have had to move out when she was in her 70s you know she was
living she'd lived there for 50 years and um you know and so it was you know I think you know after
that it was it was um you know valued at much much more than that and so it was uh you you just would
not be able to do that in in Seattle you know my parents in King County you know they're living
out as the value goes up and up and up their taxes go up and up and up which is ridiculous as
well and um so there's those barriers with the land but also just just little stupid laws that
they brought in like um uh in Australia I don't know if they I don't think they've done this but
they were talking about like in Queensland which is the major cattle producing area in Australia
they they are talking about putting in like a methane tax for these cows well they produce this
much methane that damages the environment now you have to pay it was 3 500 per per head of cattle
that is as much or more that these people make for that entire entire life cycle of that cow and
so that that obviously isn't going to work um that just is just immediately going to put everyone
out of business because you're not just going to say okay well I'll double my price now these other
people will be like no we're not going to do that um and um and of course that's another thing that
people don't don't recognize as well that it's like you say it's the bugs that are eating that
you know so so that that feed and the grass and the you know everything that the cows are eating
they aren't eating that they aren't they aren't getting nutrition from that the bugs in their gut
are the bacteria are and as a byproduct they put produce fat and die off and and our proteins so
the cow is absorbing that fat protein it's the bugs that are eating the fiber and just as a part
of breaking down fiber from those bacteria they produce methane and the the thing is that people
don't realize is that if that that plant material is getting broken down by that bacteria in the
rumen of a cow or on the ground because it's just sitting there dying it's still going to produce
that same amount of methane because it's the it's the bacteria breaking down the fiber that produces
the methane so that's going to be produced regardless and that's what people don't understand
and they're now they're trying to put people out of business and this this this that you you've got
to handle on all of this Anthony and I I just um I'm I'm Amazed by it and it's just
my my daughters is staying home um you sound really happy and I said well I am
so I don't know if they'll get I don't know when you're going to broadcast this or whether this is
or you're going to have to cuddle the whole whole lot of I'm not going to cut anything we'll just
well it doesn't matter to me but if you do this um because serious I kidding about this
and I'm I'm not just saying this to you you guys are going down in history
because you are like poor old doctor um but well that's cool that's okay I'm already
doing more than that like I you know I I read that book it came out years ago gosh I was
still still a kid I don't even think about how old I am sometimes I I just forget but but
he didn't go far enough and then he and then he killed himself basically by Falling I don't
know how he I think he hit his head and and uh Dr Atkins yeah yeah I think I think he like just
like slipped on some ice or something like that and cracked his head and he was actually brain
dead before you dead I don't know whether it was I think people say he had a heart attack it's like
oh Atkins always died of a heart attack like no he didn't that's that's complete garbage I don't
know where these people get this stuff but they just they just make up a lie and then they repeat
it and repeat it and repeat it and then all of a sudden you know people people take it up I even
saw it on on Dr huberman um he was interviewing uh Professor uh Palmer from Harvard and he wrote
that book Brain energy which is all about curing psychiatric issues by changing people's diet and
fixing their metabolic Health which is amazing and um and they were talking about you know Atkins
because Dr Palmer had done Atkins decades ago and it had really helped him and so he said oh well
you know Atkins all that's interesting but you know he did die of a heart attack and that's
what people are saying it's like so so even even Professor huberman who's a very intelligent
very uh well-read and well-versed individual uh sorry nobody corrected him well
I I tried to make a comment on it um but you know but that's the thing that it's so
popularized these things get repeated and repeated and repeated until people just go oh yeah that's
what happened and they never look it up and so you know and and I see that in medical textbooks
I swear to God I see so many things and if you trace back the origins of it it's like based
on nothing it's complete garbage and there's and there's a lot of that and so I look out for
that sort of thing but you know I mean I didn't I didn't know that until until someone said it
you know I was looking at these discussions oh he died of a heart attack I'm like I don't know
about that and someone said I was like no no we didn't here's a link blah blah blah blah and it's
just like okay there you go um but you know it's it's uh you know it's what the Nazis did you know
they said you know tell the LIE make it big and keep repeating it until everyone believes it and
that's just and that's just yeah and that's just how propaganda works you just keep repeating a
lie over and over and over again and people will start to believe it uh for whatever reason maybe
because they just believe it or maybe because they um you know have a have a vested interest in
believing it it confirms their bias you know and I think part of it is to with
where are the critical thinkers like I have had much to do with or associated with
that that took my interest to to well my husband is one of them he's a real critical thinker
but I I took it for granted everybody would think about something if they were going to
believe something that they would actually give it some thought and do some research the point is
that they can't they young people have brain fog their brains aren't they have they're born with
all this potential and then from the from their mother's breast to this horrible diet your their
brain they're brain dead I I mean they could have huge possibilities and and potential but on a
day by day basis if you don't feed that brain it's still tissue it still needs to be fed
yeah and if you're feeding it what it needs it's not going to function so people don't
question they don't do their own research God I mean I I could talk to you that all
this time on just BSE on bovine SpongeBob encephalopathy that killed our industry in
2002 May 20th 2002 when they found a a cow would be in in you know worldwide the the concern
was all over the world that bovine spongiform encephalopathy would bring on yakov's disease
because they're very similar this is not zoonotic I studied with I have a foot high of
information on this we're done but it served the purpose of the corporate world to let
especially with the controversy between Canada and and United States everybody's
trying to keep their beef industry to themselves and promote it and so this became
was allowed to run with it and it's a TSE it's not a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy
proof they're done in the United States and proof they're done in England by Mark Dr Martin
One Moment One Moment I'm just getting a call so okay um yeah very sorry um but uh something's
just come up but um thank you so much uh Maggie for taking the time to speak with me I think
it's um well I found it very very interesting and I think it's very important for people to
understand what the life of a Rancher is like and what the problems some of the problems that
that you're facing are and the realities of the situation that it's not just about getting people
eating the right thing but there are some real barriers in the way of people being able to eat
the right way even if they want to so I really appreciate you giving your perspective and telling
us your story and also just being an example of someone who's been living as a carnivore for
you know 60 70 years and and raise 10 kids uh in the same way and showing that that actually
this is not only uh viable but you know optimal absolutely and I thank you from the bottom of my
heart for taking this on and and listening to it because without the background it doesn't really
make sense and people look at life a little bit differently and and look at their own potential
yeah and the only way they're going to develop that potential is by feeding their bodies their
corporate bodies because you can't have the heart and the spirit and the energy and the mind and
the will to do anything without a healthy body I believe that there isn't a disease years ago 95
of our diseases were proven to be diseases yeah and who said we're supposed to die at a hundred
like I I I can't my bank manager said Maggie you got to live to be 125 to pay all your bills and
I said yeah well that's that's just that's the plan okay let's go for it and so we do it and I'm
not being facetious about this I mean I don't um what Mac and I have and what we do uh I'll go
to 30 year old yeah I I I'm not saying I'm not bragging about it about putting myself on any kind
of a level I'm just saying these are the facts and this is what you feed your body properly you
can do and anybody can do this yeah anyway that's great you have to make sure that there's the beef
there Dubai that's it I 100 agree well thank you so much and hopefully we can do this again and
maybe sometime I can visit your Ranch and you can show people exactly what it's like to do that I
built cabins for my kids because outgrew the house um so if ever you did a a
young girl I don't I don't know um no we've had people honeymoon here and
and it is in the summertime this place is absolutely beautiful like it's incredible it's
and so is the place in Columbia by the way I bet and the people there amazing Anthony I'm Not Gonna
Keep so I know how busy you are bless your heart I I'm I'm overwhelmed with your your ability your
time your generosity spirit that moves me as like if I'm not your mom but my golly I am so proud
of you I oh thank you well I really appreciate it well thank you you could say well this old lady
is really proud of me well okay well that's that's where I am but I I'm yeah I'm approaching middle
age as far as I'm concerned and and I mean that quite yeah well I think I think in a real way in
a very real way you are I mean for you know we're designed to live you know 120 years so you know
you are yeah yeah so all right anyway well thank you so much yeah all right well have a good night
thank you very much for your time talk to you later thank you very much for taking the time out
to listen to what I had to say if you like it then please like And subscribe to my YouTube channel
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