Raising Free-Range Kids In Idaho 🇺🇸

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[carriage harnesses jingling] ♪ country ♪ PETER: Good morning, guys. For many ranching families there's a very high price to pay to live the ranching lifestyle. So today we're gonna meet a local family who's decided to take themselves out of a lot of the noise of the modern world stay true to their values their love of land and raise their family in more of a traditional way. Let's go see what they have to say. Let's do this. ♪ country ♪ [door opens] PETER: What a great spread. PETER: How are you doing, AJ? AJ: How are you? PETER: Doing well. [Peter chuckles] -Beautiful place you got out here. -Thanks -So the kids will be sixth generation? -The kids will be six generations. My grandma, who is their great-grandma, she's still alive. I think she's here today actually. PETER: What are you doing with this dandelion? CHILD: Making WD-40. -All right, let me see it, buddy. -You shoot the top at your cousin's head. PETER: Okay, you have to shoot at your cousin's head first, right? -That's important? -And then you pull. So you get one half of it and you scratch and then it's really slippery and then you do this. [children scuffling and giggling] PETER: And that's WD-40? So AJ, from first impressions you’re sort of living in between. a very modern world, new homes, nice vehicles. -But you're dressing more traditionally. -Yeah. Planting the garden with the kids. -They know how to work. -Kids know how to work. They don't seem spoiled. AJ: Yeah, I think a lot of why we do what we try to do is 'cause we try to live with a purpose. So rather than just kind of drifting and doing what everybody around us is doing We try to look at a goal. So my big objective with everything that we do is really to create kids that are quality. -Okay. -So that's really my objective. There's a lot of things that we do that are unique and... PETER: But unique as of in the last 30 years maybe? Oh yeah, they're unique now. They're traditional is a good way to say it but there used to be a lot more focus on doing things together. <Okay. Working together, helping each other. You feel a lot different when you need somebody and somebody needs you. Right, there's a depth of satisfaction. Like there's a fulfillment. Like it would be really easy for me to just rototil the garden, right? But I've got four kids out there with picks. So I can go get a rototiller if I want... <They sweat, they make WD-40, they wrestle. -Uh-huh. -They're hanging out. PETER: How are you doing? PETER: So who lives in all these homes? AJ: So this is my dad. <Okay. Dad and mom, and we're just building this, it's one home. My grandparents used to milk dairy cows. The cows were sold for a long time before we ever were able to buy the family farm. So now, we use it for different stuff. We just have all of our horse tack in here. So I like draft horses, I wanted to do a lot with draft horses. I could see the utility aspect in a lot of the things you can do with draft horses. <Explain to those that don't know, including myself, what are draft horses? So a draft horse is a heavy type horse that is made more for utilitarian type work. Like pulling heavy loads, moving stuff. Whereas a saddle horse would be more like a lightweight horse for transportation maybe on a buggy or you could ride him around. So a draft horse is like a work horse. My grandma, she tells me about how they used to harness the work horses and they would go literally over the river and through the woods [chuckles] to her grandmother's house and they would go for Thanksgiving dinners or Sunday dinners and you know, it was just a staple of life and now you've seen those, one at a time, go. Just like everywhere, this place isn't completely unique to the changes that are happening all over the world but one thing that is unique is this valley's always kind of been like 15 or 20 years behind. So if you go back to the 80s and 90s there was still a lot of horse teams here. Now there are less and less and then you're starting to see a little bit of a revival with it though. There's a lot of the new generation that are kind of sparking an interest in it. They're watching it kind of dim out and then they're going "Wait a minute, we want to keep that alive." [horses walking] PETER: These are massive horses. [children chattering] CHILD: Gunner, you’re getting videod. GUNNER: So? [kids chuckle] PETER: Don't mess up, Gunner, you're on video. CHILD: Yeah, Gunner. PETER: You gonna pull this thing, you're that strong? GUNNER: We're all gonna pull it. CHILD: Are we moving this? [shouting] One, two, three, pull! [children grunting and shouting] We're on a roll, keep on moving! CHILD: Okay, right there. I had fish for breakfast. PETER: What kind of fish? -Um, what kind did we catch? -Rainbow trout, cutthroat trout... golden trout. -Did you guys catch 'em? -Yeah. We have a big pond down there. Breakfast of champions, it's better than Wheaties. You ever heard of Wheaties? -Nope. -It's junk cereal, don't eat it. PETER: Gunner, what are you doing here? GUNNER: Brushing the horse. [horse brush scraping] AJ: So this is a collar right here. AJ: This is a collar. That's what you put on the horse's neck so that they can lean into it. And that makes them comfortable when they're pulling something [bridle clanking] [AJ grunts] PETER: You going no saddle? AJ: They can feel your energy, they're really sensitive to... GUNNER: We don't really ride this one. AJ: If you're panicky or you're really agitated, they can sense it. If you're really calm then they reflect that. AJ: So these names are all ancestors that have lived on this farm. So Clennie and Reuben are great-great-grandparents. Silvon and Fay were great-grandparents. They lived here when I was a little kid. I remember Silvon and Fay, we'd go to Christmas parties at their house. So then they have a daughter who is named Jeanelle. -She is my Grandma. -Okay. How connected to this land do you feel since obviously your ancestry has been here for a long time? Do you feel, like, that close connection? Definitely feel a connection to it and I just think our entire culture, our entire society is kind of letting go of the traditional things. 'Cause there's always faster, there's always easier. There's always more productive. There's always a bigger profit margin and so we chase those things. We kind of worship it as a society. If you can do something and it takes a little longer but at the end of it you'll have a lot better kids nobody seems to put as much emphasis on that. PETER: Are you guys good kids? CHILD: Yeah. -Would you rate yourself a good kid? -Yes. -Yeah? -Nine out of ten. PETER: Nine out of ten! [giggles] PETER: You built these? AJ: Built the homes, yep, my dad has been a builder for most of his life. And we just come from a background where you try to do everything you can yourself, right? PETER: You designed them? AJ: Fully designed everything, built them ourselves. There's basically just a couple little things that we hired out. [horses walking and wagon creaking] [children chattering] AJ: Whoa. PETER: What's the password? -Please. -Please. Okay, we're in. PETER: So you have 15 kids? KORTNEE: [giggles] No, I have four. -She's my oldest, this is Haddie. -Okay. WOMAN: Sage is on the horse. Then Gunner right here. And the youngest is Colt. -Colt? -And then this is Garret right by you. PETER: Garret? And our niece, Grace. And a neighbor friend, Mahan. PETER: It's pretty fast, huh? These horses get going. AJ: Whoa! [wagon comes to a stop] PETER: See you, guys. CHILDREN: See you. [giggling] AJ: Whoa. [wagon noise and hooves] I lived in Sicily, I served a mission for the LDS Church. PETER: So LDS church for those that don't know, I think most know but Mormon Church, right? The Mormon church, Mormon's a nickname. It's something that is just basically used to communicate the idea of who we are but the actual name of the church is The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. It's an organization that teaches about selflessness and service and putting other people first and following Christ's example and so part of what we do in that religion is we go on service missions. [kisses at horse] And we go to foreign countries. [kisses] Every house that you can see right now within your radius of view was not hear like four years ago or five years ago. The population has quadrupled, or five or six times in the last 10 to 15 years. PETER: How do the locals feel about it or is it mixed? Well it's fine, I mean quality people are quality people, right? And so we love the ability to meet people, to be around good people but one of the problems is you end up with a lot of people that want to show up and put up "No Trespassing" signs, right? And it just sort of starts to dilute the essence of what they’re after and what we're after, right? Right. So we have a community where everybody knows everybody your kids can be riding their bike they get a flat tire, they can knock on any house somebody will give 'em a ride home. when you're used to being in that type of an environment and then you go to the environment where there are "No Trespassing" signs on people's entrances. It just... It feels like you're getting something removed that used to be so precious and so valuable. You know, maybe a lot of those people that are sort of on that level they simply you know, they don't have any bad intentions. Maybe they just think they're protecting themselves or something. But I don't think they realize if they just make friends with their neighbors there would be a whole deeper layer of protection. AJ: Hi, guys. Yeah, those guys are really cool. -Almost everybody loves the horses. -Okay. Lots and lots of people love the preservation of culture. They love the older style of living and many people, to be quite honest with you... I think the majority of people are searching for that. That's exactly the ingredient they're looking for, you know? They wanna be back in touch with the earth. They wanna be able to do things that have to do with helping to create their own food and get in touch with the resources. And that's great. It's all good. The only one small problem with that is when you start selling the commodity which is the peace, and the tranquility, and the open space everybody starts buying that and everybody starts coming to get it and there begins to be a diluting effect, right? Where there's less, and less, and less of the thing everybody's searching for. <Yeah. So it's okay, there can be a balance but one of the main things is people have to learn how to treat each other and how to interact with each other, you know? -You've been here forever, obviously. -Yeah. Someone pulls into town, they say, "Hi" to you. Are you gonna open up to them or are you gonna be like they have to earn their stripes they have to prove to you first? No, we open up to everybody. It's just the nature of how we wanna be. What you have to realize is that people are like treasure boxes and nobody takes the time to open up that key and find out what's in people's lives and in their soul. We all are too quick, too curt, too eager to chase our own pleasures our own satisfactions, our own priorities. I didn't always feel that way but I've learned that lesson where if I open up to people, communicate with people interact with people almost always, my life is blessed from it, you know? ♪ country ♪ [hooves on pavement] So usually we'll come and get drinks here and then we'll go pick up our pizza next. [Peter chuckling] -Where do you live? -I live in Florida. -Yeah. PETER: I wrestle alligators on the weekends. Yeah, I wrestle alligators on the weekends. Everyone in Florida does. You didn't know that? -Actually? -Yeah. PETER: So how often are you doing this? She said, "A lot in the summertime." -You go in like this, couple times a week? -Yeah. [hooves on pavement] PETER: Here it comes, the rain. This is what you get when you're rolling with a native. I knew right where to hide from the rain storm. PETER: You've seen these cloud formations many a times, huh? Seen it many a time. -Connected to the land? -That's right. PETER: So there was a little fertilization process in the exit only drive through area but we've taken care of it. KORTNEE: We'll leave it over there. PETER: Added to the nutrients in the grass. -Don't like and unsubscribe. Do not like and unsubscribe, and do not do it! My new marketing team. Thanks, guys. [hooves on pavement] So some of these buildings, they're new. They have the look of an older building but like the building right here on the right, it's old. I don't know... I wish I could date it right off-hand. Might be like early 1900s. [hooves on pavement] [horses slowing down] PETER: Just do a little parallel parking PETER: So we're getting pizza? AJ: Getting pizza, this is O'Rourke's. It's a Teton Valley, Idaho classic. O'Rourke's has been here since I was a little kid. Probably at least.. Oh, 30 year's I'll bet, or 32, or 35 years, somewhere in there. MAHAN: Come on up... GARRET: You have to come video me dirt biking. PETER: Do you know if you eat 10 of those you'll lose your hair. 100%, you'll be like this. -You guys eat on the road? -Yeah, we eat on the way. WOMAN: What do you want, pepperoni or sausage? I was thinking, AJ, coming into this, there would be a huge challenge living this lifestyle. But it doesn't look like a challenge for you or is it? -Is it challenging? -No, I mean it's not a challenge. We still do a lot of things. You know, just as normal people, right? We have cars and all that obviously but but it's just something that we love, you know? This is something that we do because it's a passion. We feel a little bit of a special privilege to preserve the heritage of it share it with people. The fact that people like it so much and they love the culture they love the history, they love the stories they love the fact that our horses are named after grandparents and when we tell 'em all that detail they just love it. That's probably one of the things that fuels it because it feels like you're doing something that has a positive uplifting influence to it. <Right. There's so many negative tones in this world, and there's so much self and there's so much energy towards seeking to, you know, beat people and to gain, and to win. I think that's one of the main things that makes us love it is that people like it and people feel enlightened and lifted up by it. Good pizza. -Pretty good. -Nice. Good small town pizza. PETER: How's that pizza, big man? <Yeah? <You got some on the sides just in case you run out? [horse galloping] [wagon creaking] -So it's a lot of work? -It's a lot of work. -I mean you coulda just got in a car, drove for ten minutes gotten a pizza, returned. We still do that too. [both chuckling] It's way better this way. -You like it this way better? -Yeah. It's one of those things, once you are around working horses and that lifestyle of interacting with the horses, the earth, planting stuff, harvesting stuff it's one of those things that no matter what else you do you feel like you wish you were back. It just gets in your soul It makes you feel like you have a magnetizing draw towards it There's sometimes a feeling or a connection... <Mm-hmm. To connect with your past and the history of who the people were that basically settled the area. The people that had to make the sacrifices. Like when our family came here there were no roads. <Yeah. There were no fences, there were no bridges. <Mm-hmm. There's a lot of stories that make you really appreciate what you got. Like we have a story about how when one of our ancestors came they came in on a wagon and they said they lived in a one room soddy. Which a soddy is like an old log cabin. And the rain would drip through the roof when it would rain and so they had a newborn baby. He was born premature. They said when he was born you could fit a teacup on his head. It rains, and the water drips through on him, and so it's said that they had to pull the cover off the covered wagon. -Mm-hmm. And fashion it in a way where it helped keep the drips off the baby. I think the family journal says that they'd used up all the pots and dishes to catch the drips and at a certain point... <Family journal? -Yeah, just journal records we have. -You have one in your home? I can show it to you, yeah. [scraping] PETER: What are you doing? -Eating salt. -Where's the salt? Right here, it's a mineral block for cattle. CHILD: It's just like normal salt. PETER: You were telling me when we talked on the phone you also do sheet rock. AJ: Mm-hmm. PETER: Because it's really hard to make a living ranching these days. AJ: So in this valley, if you want to have any type of an income you basically have to be connected to the lifeline of the construction boom. You're seeing a lot of people move here that have a lot of money and so you're basically watching a small farming community get flooded with second and third home buyers, many of 'em. So when I was a little kid, for example you might not have been able to hire a landscaping business. There wasn't really a landscaping business in the valley. You wouldn't have been able to hire a carpenter per se you would hire a neighbor that knew how to do carpentry. So everybody was neighbors and families. Now what you see is businesses, and businesses, and businesses starting. You can have a landscape business and it'll go. You can have a drywall business and it will go. <So why don't you just do ranching? Because it just doesn't provide enough income right now? The main reason is because if you look at the cost balance between what land costs to purchase and how much you can generate as far as cash off that land the balance is so far out of balance that it's not even realistic. Like you can't even come close to servicing the debt on what a piece of land would cost. <But if you were what we talked about earlier you split it up with your family members. But say you grew up on this land and you weren't splitting it up and the land was given to you for example. You didn't have any costs in that respect could you still pull it off here? No, not even close. -Even with that you couldn't? -Even if you owned land for free. <Yep. And you got a lot of equipment to put up hay for free and you had all your cows paid off it would be very tight even at that point. So I want to mention to the audience that we're in Southeastern Idaho and it really depends where you are in ranching. Uh-huh. How the economics shake out. So this is an area where ranching doesn't shake out to live a good life but there's some places that still offer that. -Like Nebraska being one. -We have three things working against us. First of all, we have a really, really short growing season. <Okay. So you can only produce one crop of hay and then that single crop of hay has to sustain your animals throughout a long winter. So because there's a lot of snow there's a long season where the earth is buried, the animals can't eat and you have to feed hay. If you get one crop of hay and you have to feed for seven or eight months there's basically just an imbalance there to where it doesn't work well. It seems like there are a lot of people in the nation that are confused about what's going on. There's a lot of chaos, there’s a lot of competition there are a lot of really unhappy, unsettled people. We have a ton of exposure to people who have moved here who have come here. I meet people in the community as I operate the construction business and you get into conversations, and you say to people "Where were you from?" "Oh, I was from Illinois but things are just so bad there I couldn't bear to stay." "We had to find somewhere where we could live." "Things are just so chaotic there." "The government policies are getting so corrupt that we're losing all of our freedom." This story is coming from every angle. PETER: So for your kids, I notice... Great kids by the way. Really fun but very well behaved. So when we started talking we didn't say anything but they understood we were having a conversation and they were quiet, they weren't nagging. You think this lifestyle where you give 'em a lot of work where you're around a lot just creates those qualities or what is that exactly? [clears throat] I would say yes, it is this lifestyle but I would also definitely want to express the idea that it doesn't mean you can't have quality kids without being on a farm. It definitely does not mean that but living with a purpose is critical in my opinion to developing our younger generation and so much of what's happening, in my opinion is that we're watching a generation who has been developed and raised without a purpose or without guidance. So for me the purpose isn't so specific but you have to have a goal, you have to have a directive you have to have something that is bigger than yourself. And you have to be able to look at community and society and say, "I am accountable to the people around me." And it just seems like a lot of people aren't doing that or don't understand that. There's so many youth and young children that are basically just they're like the ship at sea without a rudder. They're just getting tossed about. They're going wherever the wind blows 'em. They're doing whatever they see on TikTok. They're doing whatever they see on, you know, the next video. <Does that scare you as a parent? Well it scares me in the sense that I know that a growing majority of people... They're are turning into adults never having developed the capacities that are gonna make them responsible neighbors. PETER: Okay what are these though, these are tiny homes you're selling? No, they're just storage cabins. -You built this? -We're basically just gonna... Yeah, this one's just gonna be just a storage. We're just gonna basically store just stuff in here like boxes and tools. PETER: But it's made pretty nice, like a nice floor. It's pretty nice, it's got a good floor, it's just plywood walls, just utility. If you go back let's say 30 years. All of the kids in school would have had holes in their pants holes in their shoes. -You know, everybody here was just... -Here? Moderate to moderate poor. Like the families were very average. And what we've experienced is Jackson Hole, Wyoming is... I think it was like first, or second, or third richest city per capita in the world. So we're experiencing this effect where the billionaires are literally choking out the millionaires. So you can't even hang in Jackson if you're a millionaire. Like literally, if you have a million bucks you probably won't find a house that you can even buy over there. And so now these millionaires are getting pushed out and they're coming to Teton Valley which is the bedroom community for Jackson Hole. So the workforce for all of these huge, beautiful, ultra-mega custom homes in Jackson... The workforce lives here and a lot of the people that used to live over in Jackson are fed up with the congested busy lifestyle because it's getting really, really busy. So they're moving out and so now you have this influence from all these people that are used to that sort of more luxurious lifestyle and they're buying land over here and then there's bidding and there's competition and there's only a limited amount of land for sale. So of course that drives the price up and so what you're seeing is [clears throat] And 80 acre farm that possibly went for you know, 100,000 bucks or 50,000 bucks back in the 80s. These chunks of land are going for a half a million 1 million, 2 million, 2.5 million. So it just becomes completely out of balance. <So if all the money's coming over here where are the people that were the workers in Jackson that used to live here? Where are they going 'cause this is not cheap anymore? So they're hanging on by the skin of their teeth. They're doing the best they can to find a room, or an apartment, or to share. There's a lot of people renting and sharing apartments. I know of one specific person that was paying $800 a month for rent. Small simple home. And it went to $1,600 in the course of two or three years So that's doubled and then from $1,600 it went to $2,200 just in the last couple of months. <Hmm. So more than doubling in just the course of a couple years and that's been the side effects from all of the money coming to the valley. So it's like… You know it's a good feeling because now there's a lot more cash, right? Like you can go get a job anywhere you want and make 22 to 25 bucks an hour but the problem is you can't find a place to rent. <You could rent this out for $1,500 maybe if it had a toilet and kitchen in it, right? <Oh, yeah. So out here in Idaho... [chuckles] We put up California welcome signs. So this is a Idaho Equine Act. And so just because there's a lot of strangers coming around. You know, it used to be… You would never see a sign like that ever. My whole life, nobody would ever have something like that up. <Why, are there lawsuits coming or something? Yeah, just the mentality like somebody's gonna step out of their car and roll their ankle in a pothole and then you're gonna be liable, you know? It's this whole mindset of somebody else is accountable for my mistakes. -Is this all your land out here? -Yep. -It goes out to the trees there. -Can we walk out a little? AJ: Yeah, we can walk, we can also go ride the buggy if you want. PETER: Oh yeah, let's do that. AJ: Everything that you can see clear to the trees is the hay meadow. So the hay out here will be about this tall in two months from now. [rake scraping] [ATV engine] PETER: Are these your cows? AJ: Yeah, these are our cows, that bull's the neighbors bull though. [AJ whistling] PETER: So Rocky just knows exactly what to do, huh? AJ: Yeah, come here Rocky. [whistles] Get 'em up. [whistling] AJ: Get 'em Rocky, good boy. Get 'em. [ATV crashing through bushes] Good boy, Rocky. PETER: Just chase 'em? PETER: Okay, push 'em through. PETER: C'mon, buddy. Did you know aspen trees are the largest organism Correct me if I'm wrong but I think that's true. Largest organism on the planet. [stream flowing] [sighs] [cows squealing] PETER: So milk cows are kinder? AJ: Well, they're a very docile breed PETER: Okay. and they're basically bred and handled every single day. PETER: Right. AJ: And so their demeanor is a lot calmer than the beef cows. The beef cows are kinda wild, they're just out on the range. PETER: Sure. KORTNEE: This one was raised in a pen so she's also friendly. KORTNEE: She's a beef cow. AJ: This is a little bull right here. KORTNEE: That's a milk cow, number one. PETER: But you're not doing milk cows anymore, these are your neighbors? AJ: Yeah, well (these) are our cows but the milk cows are... We just have two in here. We just have 'em around in case we wanna milk 'em. PETER: What are we doing, Gunner? GUNNER: Ridin' the cow. ♪ country ♪ This is why I love this work. I never know what every day is gonna bring. PETER: Close. Let go. [music continues] [children chattering] [ATV engine] I think he's like a modern lifestyle type bull. He doesn't wanna go live with the ladies. [chuckles] AJ: All right. PETER: So cows getting into the neighbor's driveway? Yeah, so this is a cattle guard. Sometimes we'll have friends coming over. Maybe people that have moved here from supercalifragilistics. [chuckles] And we'll say, "Come down and drive past the first cattle guard and then turn left." And they'll get here and they're like, "Yeah, my GPS brought me right here but I didn't see the cattle guard, where was he?" We're like, "No, a cattle guard is not a person, a cattle guard is a... It's like a bridge thing that goes in the road so the cows don't just step in here." COLT: Already. PETER: That was quick, you guys. [splashing] PETER: So you have this well-stocked, huh? AJ: Yeah, there's some rainbows in here. COLT: Like a hundred. GUNNER: Just a couple rainbows. Rainbow trout. AJ: Rinse him off, buddy. GUNNER: All right. GUNNER: He might get away. PETER: That's a huge one in there. PETER: Look at that massive one out there. GUNNER: They're goldens. MAHAN: That big one's a golden. COLT: The golden one's actually mean that they're albino. GUNNER: Yeah, they're like an albino. COLT: It's an albino one. GUNNER: There ya go. PETER: Big man, let's see it. PETER: Let's see what you're all about here. AJ: Better hook one out, buddy, you're on. PETER: A lot of pressure. GUNNER: Aw, I had him. AJ: We work for the ability to live this way, right? Takes a lot of effort to generate and maintain this type of a lifestyle. AJ: You have to... PETER: You have to really want it? AJ: You have to want it, you have to work for it. PETER: So just this experience with the kids, this takes a lot of work? You just simply can't maintain all these different things alone. It takes a machine, it takes a family. AJ: When I have a day off I wanna go play with my kids. We go fishing, we go on a horse ride. We go to town on the wagon. We do all those things and it's something that I wanna be doing. I've never felt that feeling like, "Oh, I wish I was gone with my buddies." You know? I just feel a lot of fulfillment being with the kids. ♪ country ♪ MAHAN: Boom! [music continues] This is grandpa. And this is the dad of all of these sons. So this dad William, William Woolstenhulme. And then this is his son, George, who is the dad of our line. So this is my grandpa. This is also my grandpa. So then if you come over here. -So this is the same William. -Mm-hmm. And then his son is George, this guy would be on the left in the photo. Then this is Delbert, he's the one that came here and you could fit a teacup on his head, right? He was an infant when he came into this valley in a wagon. <Mm-hmm. And then he had a son named Hal, this was my grandpa. And then his son is Lance, that's my dad. Then I'm Adam, Adam James. Then these are my sons, three boys. -Oh, that's amazing. -So this is photographed back to 18... PETER: One, two, three, four, five, six, seven. PETER: Is there a pressure to keep this going? Like you wouldn't want to ever stop ranching 'cause then you sort of end it? Well there's a lot of breaks in the chain. All the way along, right? So our family has always lived a particular lifestyle. The lifestyle is a ranching lifestyle but it's also more of what I would even call preparedness lifestyle. A lifestyle of being self-reliant. A lifestyle of being able to do things on your own. PETER: Big man, can you start a fire? Mm-hmm. PETER: Can you cut a fish easily? AJ: How many times have you gone and caught a fish, and cleaned it on your own? 200 times. AJ: Maybe a couple hundred, that's probably not far off. Maybe a hundred. This is family search app, right? AJ: So my name's the name in the middle. You can see Hal, Delbert, George, and then William. So we go into William. PETER: This is an app? AJ: Yep. AJ: For example, if you wanna know about a story you can click on that. Boom, right there. PETER: Wait, anyone can do this? AJ: Mm-hmm. AJ: I'll show you how it starts. PETER: What's the name of the app? AJ: Family History. So look History of William Woolstenhulme, right? So all this stuff has to be uploaded. So if you have a family that hasn't ever contributed or saved anything you might have slim pickins. PETER: Yeah. AJ: But you still can plug yourself in and it will network you into the family history. So the LDS Church has the greatest, largest family history network in the world. Like the governments come to the church for family research. COLT: Dearest Father, we're thankful that we can all have a good time and that we can all be happy. And that we can nurture strength in our bodies and we can all be nice and in Jesus Christ, Amen. [all] Amen. AJ: All right, you got a special treat. PETER: Good job, big man. PETER: Mashed potatoes? PETER: What is this type of pork called, flattened pork or... AJ: Honestly it's from when I was in Sicily, I learned how to do that. PETER: Yeah. AJ: But it's basically you pound it really, really thin. PETER: Yep. AJ: And then it's just bread crumbs and then fried in olive oil. [spoon tapping] And then you gotta put lemon on it. PETER: Guys, how's the food? -Good. -Good. PETER: Yeah, thank yo so much, fantastic. Very delicious. From what I've talked with a lot of people about it seems like there used to be a lot of small cow herds, right? So everybody would have 10, or 20, or 30 cows and you sort of had these little small homestead type ranches all around. So the family and the ranch were connected. Instead of now, like you have this one jumbo ranch that produces thousands of pounds of beef. That's awesome. It's really cool but you're losing the connection of all the people with their food source. So when you have each family having 10 or 20 cows then you end up with a lot more people involved in the production of their own food. Okay guys, end of the road here. What a fantastic day and what I got the most out of this was it's a lot of work to live like this but the payoff can be found in these rascals. Guys... [boys shouting and playing] They seem pretty happy. So looks like they're doing things right out here in the country side of Idaho. And what a beautiful place this is. Guys, I also want to say I have a mailing list. Would love you to be part of it. I'll leave that link down below. And this is part of a greater ranching series. I have many other videos about ranching. Lives from West Texas all the way to Montana. Thanks for coming along. Until the next one. ♪ country ♪
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Channel: Peter Santenello
Views: 1,130,224
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: kids, free-range, free-range parenting, ranching lifestyle, victor idaho, peter santenello, parenting, traditional parenting, cowboys, western usa, rural living, rural parenting, free-range kids, how Idaho family raises free-range kids, living in victor idaho, free range parenting vs strict, free-range parenting effects, free-range parenting vs helicopter parenting, alternative parenting, homeschooling, truly free range parenting
Id: V1u9PzW54I8
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 37min 39sec (2259 seconds)
Published: Sun Aug 21 2022
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