Regenerative Rancher Reveals Why GRASS-FED Beef Is Better | Amy Hay
Amy, a Scottish rancher in British Columbia, Canada, shares her remarkable journey from maritime engineer to regenerative cattle rancher alongside her New Zealand husband. Their transformation from yacht industry professionals to first-generation ranchers offers valuable insights into modern direct-to-market beef operations and sustainable ranching practices. Amy's personal health transformation through carnivore diet adds another compelling dimension to her ranching expertise.
The episode reveals how Amy overcame severe septic reactive arthritis and rheumatoid arthritis through dietary intervention, ultimately healing completely on a meat-only diet after years of failed pharmaceutical treatments. Her experience demonstrates the powerful anti-inflammatory effects of eliminating plant foods, with her symptoms returning immediately when she consumes even small amounts of non-carnivore foods like beer.
As operators of BC's largest sole grass-fed direct-to-market beef ranch, Amy and her husband have revolutionized their approach by choosing hardy Scottish Highland and Galloway cattle breeds crossed with Wagyu bulls. Their regenerative grazing model allows them to run cattle through the same pastures multiple times per season, dramatically improving soil health and water retention. The ranch can hold an additional 80,000-100,000 liters of moisture per acre with just a 1% increase in soil carbon content.
Their business philosophy challenges traditional ranching by refusing to sell at wholesale prices to middlemen, instead building a 22,000-follower social media presence to reach health-conscious consumers directly. Amy provides practical advice for ranchers transitioning to direct-market sales, emphasizing the importance of social media marketing and identifying ideal customers who value quality over cheap commodity pricing.
Key Takeaways
- Choose cattle breeds suited to your environment rather than popular auction breeds - Highland and Galloway cattle require minimal intervention with only 2 calves pulled in 5 years due to their natural birthing ability
- Implement rotational grazing by moving cattle 3-4 times daily through small paddocks, allowing pastures to be grazed 3-5 times per season versus one annual hay cutting
- Build direct-to-consumer sales through social media targeting health-conscious customers willing to pay premium prices rather than competing with Walmart's $2/pound ground beef
- Increase soil carbon content by 1% to hold an additional 80,000-100,000 liters of water per acre through bail grazing and diverse cover crops including peas, barley, alfalfa, and turnips
- Eliminate inflammatory plant foods completely if dealing with autoimmune conditions - Amy's rheumatoid arthritis symptoms return immediately from even small exposures like a sip of beer
- Practice mob grazing with high animal density on small areas, moving before overgrazing occurs to maintain optimal grass length and root systems
- Focus on regenerative practices to reduce input costs - no tillage, pesticides, or antibiotics needed while running 300-350 head on 140 actively grazed acres
- Target customers who understand quality pricing and save money for months to buy quarter-beef shares rather than seeking bargain hunters who won't sustain profitable operations
- From Maritime Industry to Scottish Highland Cattle Ranching
- Building a Direct-to-Market Grass-Fed Beef Ranch
- Fighting Anti-Beef Misinformation and Environmental Myths
- Rheumatoid Arthritis Healing Journey from Vegetarian to Carnivore
- Carnivore Diet Success - From Keto to Lion Diet
- Direct-to-Market Beef Sales and Customer Education
- Raising Carnivore Kids - Steak as Basketball Snacks
- Scottish Highland Cattle Breeding for Regenerative Ranching
- Regenerative Agriculture Principles and Soil Carbon Benefits
- The Future of Ranching and Local Food Systems
- Building Direct-Market Ranch Business Through Social Media
This is an auto-generated transcript from YouTube and may contain errors or inaccuracies.