►
From YouTube: Farm Director - Gabrielle LeBlanc - Work Plan
Description
A meeting with Gabby to talk about her work plan in-depth as the Farm Director for Factor e Farm.
A
C
B
Excellent
I
was
just
so
Tim
came
here.
We
just
planted
the
200
pieces
of
sweet
potato
and
worked
it
yep,
that's
good.
We
ran
out
of
water
that
are
then
well
and
dry,
so
anything
esco,
so
we're
going
to
get
will
get
for
calling
up
a
professional
well
vigor
to
basically
get
it
well
because
we're
not
going
to
make
it
without
it.
It's
like
we're
going
to
run
out
of
work,
so
we
were
doing
this
rainwater
catchment
like
this
six
thousand
gallon
cistern,
but
that's
actually
not
probably
not
going
to
be
enough
for
us.
B
D
I
was
actually
looking
up
some
different
crops.
Have
you
guys
planted
three
sisters
on
the
property
at
all
yeah.
B
D
We
planted
it
here
about
two
weeks
ago
and
that
was
pushing
it
almost
pushing.
C
B
D
It'll
think
also
I
was
thinking
celery.
Sorry.
B
C
B
Getting
familiar
with
adapted
species,
watershed
foodshed
concept
like
map
out
the
by
region.
So
if
you're
I'm
thinking,
if
you're
sticking
around,
then
we
should
happen
out
the
bio
region,
including
the
people
who
are
in
a
closest
area
that
we
can
learn
from
and
the
share
stock
tastes
are
looking
at
them.
Yeah.
B
So
from
that,
let's
see
let's
check
in
like.
B
B
Okay,
there
we
go:
okay,
Kenya,
yeah,
okay,
so
there's
a
lot
of
stuff,
that's
speculative,
but
there's
stuff
that
absolutely
works.
So
let's
come
up
with
that
list
and
work
it
as
in
okay.
These
things
grow
now
we're
going
to
need
this
and
that
and
that,
and
that
else
to
come
to
a
complete
diet,
so
I'm
looking
at
it.
What
can
we
plan
right
now?
How
does
that
contribute
to
a
full
diet
eventually,
and
would
it
be
even
or
can
we
even
make
a
more
radical
claim?
D
B
D
Vegetables
for
like
okra
and
Posey.
B
B
If
you
yeah,
because
I
just
never
seen
anybody
do
lima
beans
here,
they're
picky,
like
I,
tried
in
Wisconsin
baby,
I
roll
up
Oh
what.
B
Probably
weeds
but
but
but
all
together
they
didn't
seem
to
be
so
robust.
They.
I
think
it
was
a
lot
of
weeds.
D
Well,
I
know
they
grow
well
in
that
climate,
in
a
specific
area
that
you're
in
I
can
I
can
look
up
if
beans
are
grown
in
that
area.
Sorry,
and
what
kind
works
well,
yeah.
C
D
D
I'm
see
how
it
goes
yeah,
unless
you
have
maybe
one
on
a
tether.
You'll
need
a
lot
of
fencing
and
they
get
out
and
make
a
lot
of
mischief
sheep.
You
don't
need
as
much
fencing.
You
can
use
hotwire,
that's
temporary
and
movable
goats.
You
can't
do
that
at
all.
You
have
to
have
permanent
and
closures
unless
you
have
them
tied
to
something
to
make
sure
they
don't
go
around.
I
really
represent.
B
D
B
C
B
Really
without
that,
where
we
can't
do
it
right,
much
I
mean
upon
does
the
deal
to
go,
but
we're
kind
of
being
like
let's
dig
it
with
our
own
bulldozer.
Long
as
we
like
when
I
was
rent
the
bulldozer,
but
then
again
the
pond
wouldn't
be
ready
for
a
few
months
anyway,
like
until
it
fills
up.
So
the
only
hope
would
be
only
practical
focus
is
a
pond
yeah.
D
D
D
It's
on
the
wiki
yeah
I'm,
finding
it
it's
jazz!
If
you
have
thunderstorms,
forecast
for
Friday
excellent
yeah,
accompanied
by
90
degrees,.
C
C
C
B
D
B
D
Serious
I've
worked
with
how
thief
I've
worked
with
a
lot
of
different
animals,
but
all
all
livestock,
sheep,
goats
and
cows.
Those
are
the
ones
I'm
most
familiar
with.
Can
you
get
milk.
D
D
D
Thing
galore
or
just
have
a
lot
of
milk
and
I
would
take
that
extra,
but
I
was
getting
a
pretty
good
amount
to
feed
the
rest
of
the
babies
from
just
the
few
that
we're
doing
really
well,
it
depends
on
the
breed.
Also,
you
could
have
a
dairy
shape,
which
is
really
good
at
making
sheep.
It
might
not
have
the
best
lambs
for
me,
but
you
can
also
get
dual
purpose
for
that.
Have
the.
C
B
D
D
B
D
B
D
Really
experimental
way
to
tether
gifts
is
to
put
a
zip
line
with
a
lead,
so
the
goats
can
walk
in
one
line
across
the
property
and
just
graze.
Whatever
is
on
that
line,
so
you
can
move
them
around
without
having
fun
and
if
you're
melting
them
every
day,
they
should
be
really
socialized
to
humans
and
pretty
friendly.
So
it
could
be
pretty
you
to
do
that,
but.
B
You're
always
gonna,
like
you're
gonna,
get
a
gold
death
from
the
tether
right.
Don't
you
think
I'm
you
know
Edna.
C
B
C
B
C
D
Mainly
it's
the
cost
of
feed.
If
you
have
enough
dress,
it
won't
be
an
issue
because
you'll
be
growing
all
the
feet,
but
I
you
guys
throw
hay
before
you
guys
still
do
that.
We.
D
Cost
of
a
cow,
it
depends
on
the
cow.
If
you
want
something,
that's
kind
of
a
reject
from
the
industrial
system,
you
can
get
something
really
cheap,
but
if
you
want
a
heritage
breed
that
needs
to
be
shipped
to
you
from
far
away
or
something
like
that,
I
can
get
more
expensive.
I've
never
actually
bought
a
cow.
D
So
I've
never
seen
the
prices
on
house
I've,
seen
kind
of
like
a
heifer
that
are
just
extra,
be
like
anywhere
from
a
hundred
to
two
hundred
dollars,
but
I
think
you
should
invest
in
something.
That's
going
to
give
you
enough
milk
to
feed
everyone
and
be
healthy,
a
step
and
a
whole
lot
of
time.
Taking
cracker
terävä.
C
B
D
That's
high
landed
at
all
are
one
of
my
preffered
breathes
on
which,
which
ones
I
Lander
they
come
in
it
for
Freddie,
also,
which
is
just
smaller,
and
it
might
be
more
yeah,
more
easy
for
for
us
to
host
house.
If,
if
you
want
to
I
would
say,
go
for
the
door
Friday,
but
they
make
a
good
amount
of
milk
and
they're
really
healthy
hearty.
B
D
D
B
D
Artificial
insemination-
and
it's
usually
done
by
a
vet
because
only
certain
people
around
or
a
breeder,
you
could
call
a
professional
breeder.
That'll
just
come
out
and
do
it
for
you.
A
lot
of
dairies
have
people
just
on
site
that
are
trained
and
they
just
that's
the
whole
job
and
say
I,
but
you
don't
and
someone
to
come
out.
Have
you.
D
Well,
I
was
trying
to
do
it,
but
I
didn't
take
the
course.
I
wanna
go
get
certified.
It
was
mostly
just
this
is
how
you
do
it
the
show
we
we
tried
it
a
few
times,
and
that
was
it
wasn't
an
actual
artificial
insemination.
We
didn't
see
if
we
got
anybody
pregnant.
We.
B
C
D
Well,
you
have
the
AUM
measurement,
which
is
how
many
animals
animal
units
you
can
have
on
a
property.
It's
like
cow,
which
weighs
a
thousand
pounds.
That's
just
an
average
per
I,
think
the
AUM
czar,
usually
per
day
or
per
month,
a
feed
that
it
will
need
that
acreage.
I
haven't
seen
your
link
end
or
how
much
grass
it
has,
but
is
it
really
lush
right
now
in
springtime?
Is
it
really
green?
There's.
B
A
lot
of
effort
yeah
it's
pretty
decent,
but
it's
in
a
sad
shape
because
it
hasn't
been
great,
like
no
animals
have
really
and
very
few
animals
that
interacted
with
it.
So
it's
pretty
it's
basically,
after
the
decades
of
commercial
agriculture,
so
it
hasn't
restored
yet
right.
So
it's
not
as
it's
definitely
not
super
lush.
It's
I
mean
it's
towards
the
end
of
the
air.
It
gets
like
you
know
as
tall
as
you,
but
it's
not
I
wouldn't
say
it's
got
the
it's
got
probably
like
seven.
Seventy
five
or
fifty
percent
of
its
growth
capacity.
C
D
C
D
Definitely,
ok,
thank
you
sleeping
and
they're
really
productive
and
they
leave
the
brows,
which
is
awesome.
They
eat
all
of
the
thorny
stuff
that
cows
won't
touch
us.
D
D
It'll
have
to
be
really
tall
and
with
no
holes
and
if
we're
putting
it
in
New,
that's
that's
fine.
It's
going
to
be
really
great.
The
worst
part
of
fencing
is
when
it
gets
old
for
goods,
because
they'll
just
find
all
the
holes
and
then
they'll
learn
how
to
get
out,
and
then
you
can't
keep
them
inside
of
anywhere
until
you
replace
all
the
holes
or
just
70
Chris.
D
There's
a
fencing
that
I,
like
it's
I,
think
three
inches
by
an
inch
and
a
half
or
one
inch,
but
it's
coyote
proof
as
long
as
you
maintain
it.
It
keeps
goats
in
and
keeps
chipping
and
their
babies.
It's
pretty
pricey,
but
I'll
check
on
craigslist
see
if
you
can
get
like
a
bunch
used
or
see
like
what
the
basic
price
is
for
a
used
fence.
Yeah.
B
D
Just
electrical,
maybe
just
starting
with
cows
and
then
see
how
the
cow
thing
works,
and
if
we
have
money
and
the
the
need
for
more
dairy
in
the
diet,
then
we
can
add
the
goats
in
afterwards,
since
we
won't
have
I
mean
a
surplus
of
space
for
them
at
first,
we
can
just
do
the
temporary
paddocks,
maybe
like
the
goats
after
we've
done
some
keys
after
we
had
the
cows
for
maybe
a
month
or
two.
D
B
Yeah,
how
many
years
can
lick
from
a
baby
cow
so
she
has
his
babies?
Is
it
like
two
years
three
years,
I've.
D
Seen
it
conventionally
done
where
they
breed
it
at
like
a
year
in
six
months,
I
would
breed
a
cow
two
years
old
uncle
just
so
she
can
grow
enough
beers.
D
B
C
B
D
B
Steep,
let's
sponsor
yet
do
you
see
any?
Can
you
get
revenue
from
that?
If
you're
a
breeder
like,
can
you
would
you
consider
getting
revenue
from
greeting
I.
D
D
That
you
have
I
think
it
is
doable
if
you
have
a
bowl
and
you
could
sell
as
seamen,
but
those
bowls
are
so
expensive,
but
the
first
then
they're
not
really
practical
monetarily
unless
you're
a
dedicated
breeder-
and
you
just
happen
to
have
this
bowl
with
amazing
genetics.
B
B
Okay
long
tonight
Iseman,
how
would
you
like,
but
I
mean
so
you
want
to
stay
for
four
I
mean
right
now.
What's
your
what's
your
feeling
and
how
long
you
you
can
stay
because
it's
like
okay,
so
there's
a
continuity
issue.
If
you,
if,
if.
D
D
I
could
say
definitely
for
six
months
to
a
year
beyond
that
it
becomes
a
lot
more
unsure
for
me
because
so
just
been
living
very
quickly.
D
What
I've
been
I've
been
changing
locations
rather
quickly
in
the
past
three
years
and
I
haven't
predicted
any
of
those
changes
so
safest
for
me
is
to
say
six
months
to
a
year,
in
which
case
it
wouldn't
exactly
be
practical
to
have
genetics
being
the
revenue
source.
No.
D
An
extremely
rare
breed,
and
then
you
just
had
a
cow,
have
a
bull
calf,
and
then
you
raise
up
the
bull
calf
and
then
you
could
sell
it.
Semen
I
can
see
that
working
in
a
year,
but
at
the
same
time
it
would
be
after
a
year
that
it
starts
making
revenue
Oh
actually
more
than
that
two
years,
because
then
the
bull
would
have
to
mature.
B
Yeah,
but
in
terms
of
I'm,
saying
not
for
revenue
sex,
but
just
far
as
like,
more
more
general
just
continuity
like,
for
example,
if
you
leave-
and
we
have
nobody
qualified
to
do
that-
I
mean
when
we
do
just
quit
that
part
or
we
really
need
to
find
somebody
else
or
that
kind
of
stuff
like
how
do
we
address
those
continuity
issues?
How
should
we
think
about
it
all
right?
What
do
you
think
about
that?
I?
Don't.
A
Think
it's
going
to
be
an
issue,
because,
if
you,
if
you
properly
plan
this
we're
going
to
our
profile,
is
only
going
to
grow
and
so
we're
going
to
have
a
wider
net
to
asked
around
the
recruiting
pool,
I.
Think
yeah.
If
you
end
up
leaving,
will
be
will
be
in
a
good
position
as
time
goes
on
to
get
somebody
to
follow
up
with
your
skill
set
I
think
we
can
we
can.
We
can
anticipate
that.
D
And
I
also
think
if
you
have
a
cow
on
just
for
dairy
purposes,
and
you
happen
to
have
a
heritage
breathe,
that's
rare
and
you
want
to
save
the
vocab
for
semen
or
breeding
or
anything
you
want
later,
if
you're
expanding.
Also
two
goats
goats
are
a
lot
more
short-term.
They
only
take
five
months
to
have
a
full
pregnancy
go
through,
so
it
will
be
a
little
bit
more
quick,
I.
D
Think
in
my
span
of
time
being
there,
oh
I
can
do
a
lot
and
have
a
cow.
Have
a
baby
have
dairy
from
that
cow?
And
if
the
baby
is
a
heifer
calf,
you
can
keep
her
debride
her
to
something
else
or
if
it's
a
bull
calf,
you
can
make
those
decisions
when
they
when
they
happen,
you
might
want
to
eat
the
baby
or
yeah.
It's
a
steer.
You
might
want
to
keep
it
just
praising
purposes.
So
it's
up
to
up
to
us
and
I.
Think.
D
D
Think
from
there
we
can
plan
for
goats,
but
first
meet
the
fencing
and
I
think
it'll
all
happen
and
its
own
time
and
we
can
go
at
the
pace
of
the
animals
and
I'll
look
more
into
Highlander
prices,
because
that
was
just
the
first
website
I
found,
and
I
bet
we
could
find
something
cheaper
and
more
practical,
mmhmm.
D
Mmhmm
yeah:
are
you
interested
in
I'm,
not
sure
thirst,
I'm,
sure,
there's
heritage
go
freeze
your
education
bill,
Riccio.
B
B
B
A
B
Down
by
south
of
Kansas
City
so
Fillmore
he
does
the
American
livestock
Conservancy
kind
of
stuff,
but
that's
yeah.
We
got
to
map
this
all
out
and
put
it
on
a
map,
and
can
we
maybe
yeah
so
there's
a
lot
to
talk
about
that.
I
mean
if
we
want
to
do
that
and
then
do
a
little
research
it
you
can
get
you
contacting
all
these
people
and
kind
of
proposed
the
best
speed.
There's
a
few
contacts
we
have
so
there's
Dan
and
there's
this
fill
these
two
people.
There's
some
people
close
by
here.
B
C
C
B
A
D
B
B
You
want
to
plan
more
more
of
those
we
got
200
but
you'll
see
it.
I
mean
it
might
add.
An
orchard
is
gonna.
I
mean
we're
going
to
see
how
it
takes
in
the
rain,
because
we
I
mean
it's
in
its
sole,
which
is
any
natural
clay
and
pretty
hard
I
mean
you
can
assess
it,
but
it's
like
I'm
hoping
we
could
get
a
huge
crap
out
of
that,
but
can't
guarantee
it.
So
maybe
maybe
plant
more
like
more
sweet
pertain
because
this
guy
here
told
me
you
can
do
it
all
the
way
through
june.
B
B
A
D
This
place
has
got
all
these
nuts
and
even
Kobe
surviving.
So
here
he's
not
some
chestnuts
are
if
we
can
get
those
growing
like
crazy.
That's
your
replacement
inside
being
born
yeah.
I
actually
just
read
that
on
isn't
it
over
with
the
saber
a
notic
property
good
about
it.
If
you're
going
to
raise
the
north
of
your
property
and
fence
it
off
on,
you
would
probably
need
some
shade
and
I
was
thinking.
Trees
would
be
the
perfect
thing
to
plan
sure.
D
B
B
A
B
C
D
A
B
C
B
B
D
There's
space
definitely:
okay,
okay,
so
let's
actually
get
the.
B
B
Think
anything
like
next
week,
he
was
gonna
start
organizing
the
orchard,
like
weed
whacking
under
the
trees,
great
stuff.
Okay,
what
are
some
other
absolutes.
C
B
Okay,
but
those
things
here
you
do
like
super
early
in
the
season.
I,
don't
know
what
you're
talking
about
with
that
I.
Think!
That's
not
here
like
that
here,
you
gotta,
do
it
like
as
soon
as
it
as
soon
as
it.
It's
like
past,
freezing,
yeah
I.
That's
the
only
way.
I've
seen
I
mean
I,
not
I've
tried
it,
but
I.
That's
the
only
way,
I've
seen
it
all
right.
D
How
about
melons,
okay,.
C
B
B
They're
gonna
be
able
to
see
how
that
mr.
thank
you
do
except
ours
for
that.
We'd
have
to
secure
eggs
from
somebody
else.
Okay,.
B
B
B
D
If
yeah,
it
is
a
small
area
like
you
pretty
much
food
scraps
and
they
can
forage
a
lot
I.
D
Never
had
them
myself,
I've
worked
with
them,
but
only
in
passing
yeah.
B
D
C
D
B
C
B
Here
to
that,
that's
how
I've
done
it
all
the
time
and
it
it's
good
works.
Well,
you
can
get
them
started
outside
that
way.
Okay,
what
about
a
beats
enough
time?
For
that
still
I
mean
it
sounds
like
carrots
and
parsnips,
if
possible,
no,
but
parts
to
take
longer
about
turn
up
yet
so
turnip,
radish,
okay,
okay,
then
greens,
like
there's,
going
to
be
a
bunch
of
greens,
we
could
do
like
lettuce.
D
B
D
Staple
for
me,
I
just
don't
know,
I
feel
big
grow.
Well
then
find.
B
Then,
at
that
time
it's
like
that's
gonna,
be
I
mean
it
gets
cold.
It
can
get
so
cold.
So
quick
here,
but
yeah.
Okay,
what
about
greenhouse?
Do
you
want
to
get
that
thing
going
again
yeah
and
the
greenhouse?
What
we
do
there
I
mean
because
right
now
it's
how?
B
Basil
would
work
well
yeah,
Rose,
well
basil,
totally
a.m.
I.
B
D
D
Me
an
eight
sweet
potato
greens.
D
Had
like.
D
Just
cooked
them,
yeah
pick
them
like
not
when
they're
super
giant
but
I,
just
kind
of
steam
them
or
sauteed
them,
and
they
kind
of
break
down
like
spinach
they're,
not
really
bitter.
If
you
get
them
yeah.
B
B
B
D
Beans
are
pretty
big
in
comparison
to
other
Pincus,
so
that
just
has
the
sheer
quantity
of
scale,
but
anything
smaller
than
that.
It's
not
gonna
be
a
huge
harvest
for
so
many
people,
yeah.
B
We
could
do
like
so
melons
squash
if
we
could
like
sweet,
Nina
ever
hear
of
sweet
mama
squash.
No.
B
It's
sweet
little,
oh,
that's
like
the
best.
So
if
it
could
be
five
on
that
so
beef
up
on
a
squash,
there's
the
sweet
potato
that'll
be
like
a
real
staple.
Green
beans.
Corn
could
be
pretty
staple
shell
beans,
I
mean,
I
don't
know
how
bread,
tomatoes
and
peppers
peppers
were
kind
of
I.
Don't
know!
That's
it's
like
I
would
question
that
really
I
mean
it's
late
way
late
here,
for
that
melons
could
do
it.
Imagine
some
watermelons
and
other
things
we
had
like
bad
squash
bugs
here.
B
Oh
really,
oh
yeah
I
mean
I,
think
it's
just
a
lack
of
health
in
the
soil,
I
think
they're
just
in
bad
soil
ecology,
but
we
got
like
totally
correct.
We
grew
all
these
watermelons
like
the
second
year
first
year
and
they
got
totally
wrecked.
We
caught
a
harvest
of
them,
but
they
were
like
barely
ripe
and
get
touch
of
them,
but
yeah
they
got
totally
decimated,
I
have
hope,
and
carrots
as
a
staple
yeah
beats
possibly
parsnips
that
we
can
get
15
of
season
turnip.
B
B
B
So
from
so
look
at
the
food
circle,
food
circle,
people,
let's
find
something
there.
Can
you
like
start
looking
for
that?
But
you
have
any
time
to
look
for
that,
because
that's
something
we
if
we
come
here
like,
let's
hit
the
ground
running
or
like
we
can
even
get
it
before
you
blow
on
that
before
you
come
up
I'm
going
to
be
away
for
the
next
week,
but
yeah
I'll
be
good
to
find
to
find
a
good
source,
a
reliable
source.
We
could
get
like
42
at
one
time
and
do
that,
let's
get
some
eggs.
C
B
B
Coming
yeah
all
right
what
else
you
talked
about
rice
by
me,
I
have
never
heard
of
anybody
doing
rice
in
this
state.
Yeah.
C
B
C
B
D
B
We've
got
some
grapes,
but
still
those
need
to
be
taken
care
of
their
getting
weeded
out
on
their
trellises.
It's
pretty
wild
here.
It's
like
a
pretty
grass
stout
and
the
whole
orchard
area,
and
all
that,
but
it's
got
a
lot
of
I
mean
it's.
What
school
actually
is
that
there's
so
much
planted
so
if
it
gets
cleaned
up
we're
in
like
decent
shape,
mm-hmm
actually
mm-hmm.
That's
that
stuff!
I
like
to
do
that's
great
mmhmm,
yeah,
so
Marines
we
could
definitely
do.
I
would
that,
would
that
be
outside
all
right?
B
Charred
Ian
truck
should
might
be
able
to
do
that
still
what
about
some
other
Oh
like
man,
if
you
could
get
cilantro,
oh
good,.
B
Builds
lunch
hour
think
those
would
pretty
much
succeed
here.
Yep
those
would
a
radish,
radish,
radish
tip,
can
succeed
here.
I
think
that
the
Brassica
crops
don't
do
well
here
because
of
the
bug.
So
it's
like
yeah
that
organ
is
it
a
bit?
That's
it
other
stuff
would
be
like
so
the
kind
of
sulfur
cabbage
it's
the
cabbage
moth,
sir
looper,
sir.
Whatever
for
the
brassicas
I,
don't
what
are
those
things
that
worms
those
worms?
What
are
those
you
wore
me?
They
get
worms
on
them.
B
B
Will
grow
sphere
that
grows
well
and
then
the
longer
term
stuff
like
like
hazelnuts,
chestnuts
acorns,
all
kinds
of
nuts
black
walnuts,
black
walnuts,
we
can
freestyle
here.
Oh,
we
can
catch
a
lot
of
that
that
that
would
actually
be
a
major
nut
crop
that
we
can
catch
all
over
the
place.
Yeah.
It's
actually
pretty
good,
just
go
on
the
roads
and
take
them
just
get
the
fallen
ones.
Mmhmm.
C
D
We
build
I
think
yes,
mushrooms
celery,
it
can
be,
it
can
be
like
a
root
cellar,
mushroom
growing
operation
in
one.
Oh,
that's.
B
So
that's
quit
by
then
okay,
so
the
root
cellar,
/,
shroom
house,
yeah
yeah
they'll,
be
awesome
right
and
yeah
yeah
yeah
and
if
we
can
struggle
on
our
own
spawn
and
self-propagating
and
I'll
be
awesome.
Yeah.
D
B
B
A
A
He's
a
really
good
friend
of
mine
he's
a
really
great
guy.
He
runs
a
40-acre
farm
in
Denver
and
he's
got
a
master's
in
home,
soil
science
he's
he'd,
be
an
awesome
resource
and
he
said
that
he
would
come
with
me
to
factory
farm
when
you're
getting
going
and
we
could
just
sit
down
and
just
be
there
for
the
first
week
or
whatever
I
mean
it's
up
to
March
him,
but
so
I'll
get
back
to
you
and
we'll
try
and
schedule
a
meeting
this
week
sounds.
D
B
B
Yeah
he
has
one
good
run,
but
but
we're
gonna
build
one.
So
Graham
is
coming
so
we're
going
to
do
that.
I
mean
in
the
meantime.
We
could
even
consider
buying
one,
but
it's
like
or
renting
one
from
Walt
or
something.
But
we
don't
have
one
right
now.
So
that's
we
can
get
on
building
one
really
quickly
or.
B
B
Have
to
kind
of
consider,
like
all
the
tools
so
make
sure
like
drop
all
the
tools
make
sure
you've
got
to
full
to
a
list
and
we'll
check
off
the
ones
we
have,
but
that's
a
thing
to
consider
like
a
draw
up
a
tool
list
of
stuff
materials
list
like
if
we
do
the
defensing
I
call
so
prepare.
All
of
that,
like
basically
build
materials
that
we
got
to
buy
other
materials
yeah.
B
So
let's
get
some
numbers
and
see
what's
really
practical
to
get
down
to
I
mean
I,
think
well,
I
guess
probably
finalized
a
lot
of
that.
Once
you
see
the
place
and
see
what
it's
really
like,
but
probably
like
a
lot
of
the
seed
stuff
I
mean
we'll
probably
got
to
get
that
beforehand.
Great
it's
time
sensitive,
yeah.
B
C
B
You
have
things
like
that:
okay
and
look
at
the
start.
Mapping
out
our
friends
in
the
Kansas
City
food
circle
that
would
be
I
mean
I
would
say,
that's
the
number
one
resource
as
in.
If
you
can
talk
to
people
to
find
out
what
works,
so
you
can
be
planted
all
kinds
of
stuff
and
you
can
see
none
of
it
gross,
but
it
plant
the
right
kind.
It
is
going
to
grow,
it's
very,
it's
so
sensitive,
so
you
so
I'm
eating
that
ass.