1 Cow = Over $10k in profits: Basic Economics of Homestead Milk & Eggs
Safety notice: This article is not for everyone. It relies entirely on the expert knowledge of experienced, trained professionals instead of personal, first-hand knowledge. If you are one of the many in this generation who is totally lacking in common sense, don't even bother reading this article. Chickens and quail and garden worms don't stampede, trample, kick through bones and groins, have horns, go into heat, or attract packs of child-eating wolves. People with decades of experience working with 1,500 pound animals can still be injured, maimed or killed by mistakes. These animals can and will break through gates and electric fences. These animals routinely step on dogs, kids, and break bones Life is not a game. There are no do-overs. Don't do anything stupid. Stick to 4-pound chickens and smaller and you'll live longer. Use of this information entirely at your own risk. If you read one article, hop on a horse and buy a cattle ranch and get killed instantly, it's your fault and God was right to kill you.
Fact: It's been said 80% of Americans are allergic to the milk produced by factory farms. Some Americans have begun to choose goat's milk over cow's milk for this reason. But an A2/A2 cow's milk, produced by some breeds common to family farms, is mostly lacking in β-casein proteins and has the A2 form instead. It's therefore more healthy and human-digestible.
Fact: Raw milk isn't sold in stores for human consumption. If, for any reason, you want or need the live enzymes present only in raw milk, you can't buy it anywhere in America. A scientific study in rats showed high-temperature pasturization impaired calcium absorption.
Cows cost money. They also produce money. So how many do you think you need?
It will only take about $350 billion dollars of propaganda per year to be on an equal footing with the enemy. How do you get there? By faith and one other thing.
Exponential math. Be fruitful and multiply. Like turning that tiny seed into a mustard tree. Anything can be dropped from a helicopter if we keep growing and spreading jackboots to all nations...
Cattle are not merely meat-producing, milk-producing cash-creating units. They also love life, peace, have a fighting spirit, a character, and are a living being. They are crucial part of our supply lines, giving milk to feed our people and all fellow creatures on the homestead from the dogs and cats to the swine and even chickens.
Contrary to popular belief, cattle are an ancient symbol of our strength. The alphabet of our people begins with the strength of the ox and the mastery of large animals, just as the wealthy shepherd Abraham started with the mastery of these powerful creatures.
The children they nourish and grow into an army of fighters aren't just more soldiers in God's army. They're also human beings. When grown, as few in our childless times have realized, are probably far less intolerable than most of the materialistic, hedonistic shirkers and traitors we normally choose to associate with.
But both of these kinds of creatures, both man and beast, also produce piles of sweet cash for the wise farmer. (If that's your only motivation.)
But money is not meant to be piled up. God intends it to flow. It rewards the people and the nations who circulate it. Money isn't the only thing, but it's as important as good circulation of oxygen. Without which we would surely suffocate and succumb to the toxicity of what proceeds from our mouths and defiles a man.
An investor wants a return on his investment. At the very least, he wants to break even quickly.
The family that drinks a gallon of milk per day spends about a thousand dollars per year. It's not impossible for a milk-producing cow to repay the investment in less than a year.
I'll bet you didn't know, and have never considered that you might break even on the investment of a cow in less than 10 months. Even sooner if the milk from cows reduces the feed cost of raising the 100 or so chickens your family eats per year.
Some varieties are bred not for maximum corn-fed milk production, but instead were bred as perfect foragers fed almost entirely on grass, making them an excellent breed for the homestead farmer.
And the cow raised on pasture fertilizes it for you.
If the one-year outlook is good, the ten-year outlook is even better.
Your precious diaper-wearing humans won't break even in their first year.
Especially when you and your ideological brothers are massively multiplying yourselves into mighty armies with 1+ Aryan bowlcut-making breeding wives pumping out profit-generating little chad.
According to Homestead Catholic, on milk alone, you're conservatively generating $4,320 on a $3,000 investment with a healthy Jersey cow in 10 months. Could yield twice as much as your conservative estimates, but we're not counting those.
With an average lifespan of 20 years, that's giving you a conservative net value of $23,000, calves included.
You don't even have to go whole-hog with a homestead farm and buy a $1,500 cow-calf pair (plus $1,500 in equipment). Get the good equipment, and your daily chores are a lot closer to 10 minutes per cow.
People do occasionally give away free animals. Check on Craigslist and you'll see if what you want.
At a minimum, cows can produce milk, beef, and work. Pulling chicken tractors, if you like. Not necessarily practical, but possible.
But if you did, you're looking at a ten thousand dollar long-term return on investment or more. It takes time to manage the cow, of course. But it's a job paying SOMEONE $24.17 an hour to care for and maintain the animals. (Psst. Kids. KIDS.)
You'll also need at least an acre of growing pasture, feed, minerals.
You're generating more milk than your family needs, but the extra goes to raising the calf, which becomes beef, and other animals will happily consume any surplus, further reducing your costs to raise everything else. Chickens, pigs, cats, or whatever.
And, of course, you can, in theory, sell the milk and/or all the animals produced by that milk, if you won't/can't sell food, for any reason.
This puts you at the break even point very quickly. A cow is one thing you could put on a credit card and I wouldn't complain about it. Not a peep out of me.
Same for egg-layers and meat birds. (Want grass-fed, ultra-local eggs for just over a dollar per dozen?)
Chickens can forage for up to 70% of their own food. Giving them kitchen scraps and extra milk products to supplement their feed cuts the cost of raising broilers (meat birds) and layers.
If you don't need a cow (or two) and 2 to 4 gallons of milk per day to supply your farm, then sheep and goats are always an option, converting grass and brush to milk for you.
(Obviously, there's more to it than that.)
The problem is convincing people it doesn't cost more to scale up. It costs less. There's much less labor per animal, less labor per gallon of milk generated, and no good reason not to do it right.
If you're a good 10 or 20 miles outside the suburbs, there's a good chance there's time to plant you some fruit trees.
Short of a scorched-earth campaign of Mongols rolling through your town and torching it all, those fruit trees will very likely continue to be there producing bushels of food for the little soldiers at home and those blazing through in hot pursuit of sexual degenerates.
Also, your horses and donkeys, goats and such will eat that stuff and save you a few bucks on making muscle-building yum steaks.
If you've got the market for your product, it's simply a question of financing, scaling, and determining how much you want to grow.
Scaled-up family farm:
ANIMALS AREN'T AN EXPENSE. THEY PRODUCE VALUE.
So should humans. Ahem. Attention filthy useless transfluid pinko commie thieves. If you don't work, you don't eat.
The sensible approach is to start small.
Getting a few quail or a kitchen chicken to eat your table scraps is a very small start.
But be sure to start.
And farmland exists to produce food and jobs for an infinite number of soldiers in an infinite number of armies.
You might also... you know.
Love them.
What did Moses say to Abraham's children?
You don't deserve these cow-mandments!
"He who hastens to wealth will not go unpunished." - Proverbs
Fact: It's been said 80% of Americans are allergic to the milk produced by factory farms. Some Americans have begun to choose goat's milk over cow's milk for this reason. But an A2/A2 cow's milk, produced by some breeds common to family farms, is mostly lacking in β-casein proteins and has the A2 form instead. It's therefore more healthy and human-digestible.
Fact: Raw milk isn't sold in stores for human consumption. If, for any reason, you want or need the live enzymes present only in raw milk, you can't buy it anywhere in America. A scientific study in rats showed high-temperature pasturization impaired calcium absorption.
Cows cost money. They also produce money. So how many do you think you need?
That's right. A tall, cool glass of white supremacy. |
The other mustache that's a symbol of our people and our movement. |
Your mission: Produce about this many great grandchildren of the same race and religion as you to win the real war. |
Cattle are not merely meat-producing, milk-producing cash-creating units. They also love life, peace, have a fighting spirit, a character, and are a living being. They are crucial part of our supply lines, giving milk to feed our people and all fellow creatures on the homestead from the dogs and cats to the swine and even chickens.
Contrary to popular belief, cattle are an ancient symbol of our strength. The alphabet of our people begins with the strength of the ox and the mastery of large animals, just as the wealthy shepherd Abraham started with the mastery of these powerful creatures.
The children they nourish and grow into an army of fighters aren't just more soldiers in God's army. They're also human beings. When grown, as few in our childless times have realized, are probably far less intolerable than most of the materialistic, hedonistic shirkers and traitors we normally choose to associate with.
But both of these kinds of creatures, both man and beast, also produce piles of sweet cash for the wise farmer. (If that's your only motivation.)
But money is not meant to be piled up. God intends it to flow. It rewards the people and the nations who circulate it. Money isn't the only thing, but it's as important as good circulation of oxygen. Without which we would surely suffocate and succumb to the toxicity of what proceeds from our mouths and defiles a man.
An investor wants a return on his investment. At the very least, he wants to break even quickly.
The family that drinks a gallon of milk per day spends about a thousand dollars per year. It's not impossible for a milk-producing cow to repay the investment in less than a year.
I'll bet you didn't know, and have never considered that you might break even on the investment of a cow in less than 10 months. Even sooner if the milk from cows reduces the feed cost of raising the 100 or so chickens your family eats per year.
Some varieties are bred not for maximum corn-fed milk production, but instead were bred as perfect foragers fed almost entirely on grass, making them an excellent breed for the homestead farmer.
And the cow raised on pasture fertilizes it for you.
If the one-year outlook is good, the ten-year outlook is even better.
Your precious diaper-wearing humans won't break even in their first year.
Especially when you and your ideological brothers are massively multiplying yourselves into mighty armies with 1+ Aryan bowlcut-making breeding wives pumping out profit-generating little chad.
Just like them Bible times, goys and gals. If you wanted a clan to fight these devils back to the pit of hell, you built them from the ground up. With the American (pale American) population SHRINKING, the only whites will be those smart enough to fight back with this:
According to Homestead Catholic, on milk alone, you're conservatively generating $4,320 on a $3,000 investment with a healthy Jersey cow in 10 months. Could yield twice as much as your conservative estimates, but we're not counting those.
With an average lifespan of 20 years, that's giving you a conservative net value of $23,000, calves included.
My milkshake brings all the bowlcuts to the yard. |
You don't even have to go whole-hog with a homestead farm and buy a $1,500 cow-calf pair (plus $1,500 in equipment). Get the good equipment, and your daily chores are a lot closer to 10 minutes per cow.
People do occasionally give away free animals. Check on Craigslist and you'll see if what you want.
At a minimum, cows can produce milk, beef, and work. Pulling chicken tractors, if you like. Not necessarily practical, but possible.
But if you did, you're looking at a ten thousand dollar long-term return on investment or more. It takes time to manage the cow, of course. But it's a job paying SOMEONE $24.17 an hour to care for and maintain the animals. (Psst. Kids. KIDS.)
You'll also need at least an acre of growing pasture, feed, minerals.
You're generating more milk than your family needs, but the extra goes to raising the calf, which becomes beef, and other animals will happily consume any surplus, further reducing your costs to raise everything else. Chickens, pigs, cats, or whatever.
And, of course, you can, in theory, sell the milk and/or all the animals produced by that milk, if you won't/can't sell food, for any reason.
This puts you at the break even point very quickly. A cow is one thing you could put on a credit card and I wouldn't complain about it. Not a peep out of me.
Same for egg-layers and meat birds. (Want grass-fed, ultra-local eggs for just over a dollar per dozen?)
Chickens can forage for up to 70% of their own food. Giving them kitchen scraps and extra milk products to supplement their feed cuts the cost of raising broilers (meat birds) and layers.
If you don't need a cow (or two) and 2 to 4 gallons of milk per day to supply your farm, then sheep and goats are always an option, converting grass and brush to milk for you.
(Obviously, there's more to it than that.)
The problem is convincing people it doesn't cost more to scale up. It costs less. There's much less labor per animal, less labor per gallon of milk generated, and no good reason not to do it right.
If you're a good 10 or 20 miles outside the suburbs, there's a good chance there's time to plant you some fruit trees.
Short of a scorched-earth campaign of Mongols rolling through your town and torching it all, those fruit trees will very likely continue to be there producing bushels of food for the little soldiers at home and those blazing through in hot pursuit of sexual degenerates.
Also, your horses and donkeys, goats and such will eat that stuff and save you a few bucks on making muscle-building yum steaks.
If you've got the market for your product, it's simply a question of financing, scaling, and determining how much you want to grow.
Scaled-up family farm:
ANIMALS AREN'T AN EXPENSE. THEY PRODUCE VALUE.
So should humans. Ahem. Attention filthy useless transfluid pinko commie thieves. If you don't work, you don't eat.
Come on, guys. Don't be a trans-fluid anti-American. |
The sensible approach is to start small.
Getting a few quail or a kitchen chicken to eat your table scraps is a very small start.
But be sure to start.
And farmland exists to produce food and jobs for an infinite number of soldiers in an infinite number of armies.
You might also... you know.
Love them.
Love? Gross.
What did Moses say to Abraham's children?
You don't deserve these cow-mandments!
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