The Green New Deal Is Already Impacting Our Family Farm



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Andy β€œaTrippyFarmer” Dole is a 6th generation farmer from Central Illinois. On this farm, Andy works alongside his father, Marty, his uncles, Chris and Jeff, and his sister, Katie, to grow corn and soybeans on some of the finest dirt in the world. Andy and his family are deeply rooted in the area, operating a large farm that traces it origins back into the 1800s. Although some tracts did not stand the test of time, Andy and his family still grow corn and soybeans on fields that have been in the family for longer than even the oldest members of the farm have been alive. We do, we have, and we always will take tremendous pride in calling this piece of paradise our home. Andy was a Bronze Tablet graduate of the University of Illinois in the field of Crop Sciences, following the same path as his father and late grandfather.

It would be misleading for Andy to claim that this life is one that came by chance; rather, as a member of two multi-generational farm families, it was simply in his blood. His passion for agriculture traces back to his early youth–some of his fondest, earliest memories being of days spent riding in the combine with his father and grandfather. Although his understanding of the lifestyle was much less complex in the beginning, the love he has for farming, and its industry has only appreciated through time. As this dream blossomed into adulthood, Andy now works relentlessly, and tirelessly, to chase his own dreams and to build a farming operation of his own alongside his family.

We, as a whole operation, are handymen, electricians, mechanics, landscapers, accountants, economists, caretakers, stewards, and, most importantly, farmers, and we take an incredible amount of pride in our work. There is no challenge too overwhelming, no situation too stressful, and no problem too difficult for us to take on, and we want to take you along with us. Welcome to our farm and welcome to our lives. You have the best seat in the house to watch the everyday chaos of farming unfold–we usually only get concerned when things aren’t going wrong!

Follow Andy on Social Media for Live Updates:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/atrippyfarmer
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/adolefarms
Instagram: https://instagram.com/atrippyfarmer

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38 thoughts on “The Green New Deal Is Already Impacting Our Family Farm”

  1. Not a bad channel, but you should set your own groove of putting out constructive content rather than mimic other farm youtubers. They set their own by producing quality good content. Its like cheating back in school off someone else.

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  2. Andy, we have many wells. Some abandoned, most are still producing. The term capping a well, means you may come back in the future and produce it. Plugging, which is what y’all are doing, they use cement, and then cut the casing or sometimes pull the casing. Those are baby sized pump jacks. I wish I had pictures of our pivots that have been modified to clear the bigger pump jacks. Some towers are 40ft tall.

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  3. Maybe you haven't cleaned your air filter recently, JD replaced my whole airbox because I couldn't keep mine clean, there is a PIP because of some molding irregularity. I had to clean it every 20 to 30 hours at harvest when I got my 8R, previous tractors would go all season.

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  4. Hey Marty, Andy, Allie, Lenny and the beautiful Miss Katie, and rest of the crew πŸ‘‹πŸ€ πŸ‘‹, LOVED THIS episode, the night traffic while you all worked, the lake and the friendly hitchhikers with food lol, and the hilarious banter, love it ALL, Please don't change ANYTHING, YOU ROCK DUDE!!!!, until next time, stay safe, stay awesome out there y'all πŸ‘‹πŸ€ πŸ‘‹

    Reply
  5. Nice video as always! Here in our farm in Brazil we have the exact same combines for haverst our crops, with a 12 row corn for our bigger combine and just for soybens and wheat we use 2 combines. Not working with 2 combines on corn makes me thing if it is the best option (considering depreciation). Other coincidence is that we just bought a s780, and with less then 20 hours we had a hydraulic failure that forced us to leave the machine in the field for 3 days. I even rewatched your old videos to compare if the problem was the same you guys had, but I don't think it was. For us was a clutch that runs the hydraulic pump that desintegrated in pieces.

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  6. Outstanding camera work and banter mate. Cant believe you dont blow your air cleaners every day or 2nd day, poor 8r. Do you use your own music? Always watching here in NEW ZEALAND.

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  7. Hey man I was going to let you know that I love all your videos you do a wonderful job at editing and you do a wonderful job at filming and especially with all the talking that you do you keep everybody completely informed and I love watching your channel and I can definitely tell y'all are always top notch on maintenance and keeping things up the par but when you open the air filter box I like to got sick to my stomach that's the quickest way to ruin the engine y'all got to blow those air filters out everyday or every other day trust me you'll have a lot better performance out of your engine if you do anyways y'all still do a good job and I know y'all know what y'all are doing but that's just my opinion my advice and I still want to say thank you for your videos and all your content I definitely appreciate it and you're one of the best out there so God bless and happy Thanksgiving

    Reply
  8. Wow those combines look like they have really good visibility with the led lighting, wayy better than the 1980s and 90s basically back then the headlights were so people could see you not so you could see!

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