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 [Music] welcome to Freedom Farms carbon negative organic regenerative permaculture farming you know this is 900 magical Acres of Heaven on Earth and I'm going to take you on a tour through this but first I want to show you a little bit of the magic a newborn's first day on Earth and with Nicholas spaza my farm manager this picture uh you know I've been trying to uh make contact with uh the people that issue carbon credits there's several businesses that do that and they asked me to go around with my


farm manager and have our pictures taken in different areas so that they can see the scale of the project project the type of uh uh Greenery uh and sort of estimate how much carbon it's going to be sequestering and so you're going to see a bunch of pictures with like me and Nicholas standing there but uh right above my head here we're standing on what I call my Mountain it's pretty neat to have your own Mountain um but you know I've been I've been investing I've got millions into this at this point and


it's all at a loss I mean it's a nice place to go I've only been there five days this year for my birthday uh but uh you know I'm I'm working instead uh the uh some of the buildings aren't done I'm going to be moving up here later this year and uh working from there but basically this is uh just an investment in the future of humanity and so what what we've got here if you look at these buildings right here this is the uh main buildings of the Ranch but the ranch actually I call


it a ranch because Farm uh the conjures a picture for me of that guy with a pitchfork and his wife and they're they're not real happy looking uh versus Ranch is like cowboy on a horse with chaps on maybe some Six Guns a hat you know it's it's it's got more charm to it so I like the word Ranch better than Farm but uh this is mostly going to be a farm although we do have horses they're all rescues as you will see um except for the newborns the PE the ones that were born on the property but these are the


main buildings but the farm actually goes all the way back to these houses up on this Ridge here and the lowest point on the property is 22 or 2300 ft way down here uh the uh and it goes to this road these buildings and this road um and goes all the way over to this side uh so we're standing on my Mountain which is about 3,200 ft but if you turn around and take a picture the opposite direction uh this is Sero deunta the highest peak in Puerto Rico the property line of the ranch is about where the


sunlight is it goes from the road across here across this Valley and then sort of jogs over and ends up right at the uh the where this flat spot begins now uh it's another couple of Miles back to uh s deuna so this is 3650 ft this is 4,300 Ft but the ranch goes all down this mountain now to get up to this peak I wanted to see the scale of the property and the surveyor needed to access the uh four the SE several points on the property um and so uh we helped to cut him a trail first we had to refresh an


old road that existed that got us up to here and then I had to pay a couple of M machete guys to cut a trail right up to that Peak and here is what it looks like when you're on that Peak this is a view looking North so this is the North Coast of the island this is about U 15 there's the ocean over there too about 15% of Puerto Rico's North Coast but then there's this mountain here that blocks the view of the ocean a little bit but then there's another 15 % on you know I didn't have there were bushes were


trying to shoot through here so I couldn't do like a panorama shot however if you just turn around and take a picture the opposite direction it looks almost like this and you can see about 20 25% of the South Coast from that one spot we are standing on the dividing line uh between the South and the North Coast of Puerto Rico is the uh prop the north property line uh of my property here I'm pointing at something and then here we're coming back from visiting the highest point on the property and the


weather can change very rapidly in uh Puerto Rico and so you know the cloud went over us there was a burst of rain and we were trapped here's Dan and me cutting a path uh trying to find a place for uh his he's got a little place up there also we all have these very little places because the mission of uh creating making agriculture sustain both sustainable and carbon negative is the most important thing so the payoff will come later right now it's just investment and I've put you


know there's Millions going into this property uh so here we are standing in the bed of a what's called an SUV they're also called side by side it's a ranch vehicle farm vehicle that uh we're standing in the bed of it looking over the top because when you are going through all of the uh jungle Greenery uh the driver can't see where he's going so you have actually sometimes somebody will actually stand on top of this canopy so that uh their eyes are like uh six or 7 feet above the


driver's eyes so you can see tell the driver where what direction to go next and so this is our little John Deere XUV that I call Dear John up on top of my mountain and um this thing has 18 horsepower and it has taken us everywhere with just 18 horsepower goes up the steepest Hills through the deepest mud and sand and it just does amazing things I couldn't find a new one and luckily this one popped up used for just $6,000 and I and it has paid for itself many times over uh this is Lincoln Jude he's my 2D animator the one


that uh if you've watched hidden secrets of money anytime you see something that looks like a painting or a hand sketch that's Lincoln that does that this is H one of Nicola's Sons Kanani uh Nicola is from Bulgaria his wife is Puerto Rican so colani is half Puerto Rican half Bulgarian with a Hawaiian name uh very International uh we have four large ponds uh three small rivers but they become raging torrents uh during like a hurricane uh and a 800 foot mountain in the middle of the property and this is


very early on these are the the very first visits to the property and we couldn't get across the river when I bought the property I had seen uh about uh 0 point 0 one% of the property uh because you just couldn't get anywhere um and so again this beautiful little river and uh here's Nicola and myself for in these pictures for the carbon credit uh place there are quite a number of these uh mountain ridges where the ground is flat enough to do the types of crops that are normally row crops that are on fairly


level ground uh however Nicola tells me that this particular type of grass grows when the soil has been damaged or depleted it's like one of the first things that comes back it fixes nitrogen gets the uh soil ready for the next type of life that comes in but so we're going to have to rehabilitate these mountaintops because uh the uh type of Agriculture this was a coffee Farm uh before I had it they stopped farming in 2006 roughly and so it hasn't had any pesticides or herbicides on it for a


long time and it only takes I think three or six years to get it certified organic uh and so we're working on The Organic certification now but um so we have to rehabilitate that but if you see the these ferns over here they call them Palms in P palm trees in Puerto Rico they're ferns uh that's where a valley starts and the valley goes all the way to these mountain ridges and that is the that North Mountain Ridge that is the dividing line between South and North Puerto Rico between this there is a 300


acre Valley that is pristine we've flown a drone over it I don't think anybody has been in this Valley for more than a hundred years now the Spanish logged all of Puerto Rico a few hundred years ago and so the path that we refreshed on the Mountain Ridge is an old donkey path uh from logging the island uh and so this we flew a drone over it it's got its own River and there's evidence of waterfalls we can see ponds with ripples coming out from one end so we we're pretty sure it


has some uh waterfalls otherwise the waterfalls are under the greenery so you can't see them but it's 300 acres that we should be able to get carbon credits for and I want to leave it all of that natural and then uh there's about 300 acres that we can Farm on uh there's another couple hundred acres so there's about 500 Acres total that are natural there's about 100 acres that we want to rehabilitate and bring it back toward nature it's a little bit too steep to be farming the way we want to farm uh a lot


of the property is extremely tropical uh this is Nicola taking a selfie with a goat we had a few goats for a while we don't have any right now uh but and here's a uh very strange looking rooster but beautiful nonetheless and Nicola with a 16lb cabbage and a carrot the diameter of a baseball bat now Nicola is 6'4 he's a big guy 16lb cabbage that's two babies and it doesn't hurt to let them get big the flavor this was sweet delicious it was great 16 lb if you're eating 6 oz


of col SL or something that's over 40 people that that one cabbage can feed uh carrots are are a similar situation here's one of his sons Kanani with a beet the size of his head and the beets it's delicious and so we're growing crops that other Puerto Ricans don't typically typically grow and we can do this because of the altitude and the weather and we we haven't even explored the microclimates all of this was grown at the 2400t level but it's cooler and uh you know different weather up on top


of my mountain and then when you go up to the Mountain Ridge it's very different from that and so uh the microclimates give us the possibility of this big variety here is a little experimental Garden where we've got uh cabbage I believe this is a broccoli plant more cabbage broccoli there's Dill back here and kale and uh um we grow uh quite a a wide variety of the experimental crops we're getting ready to do the larger plantings but it takes a lot of uh planning and investment in


all of this it's a it's a a big cash burn but I think it's going to pay off for all of humanity it will uh so here's uh so Nicholas kids with a couple of their friends getting ready to go swimming and boating and here they are on uh the upper one of the upper ponds the pond that's up on my Mountain uh and uh this one it's a it's a fairly you know I'm tempted to call them Lakes but you really there it's a pond but there's this floating flower here that's uh


choking it off taking up about a third of the pond at this point and we have to remove some of that because you can fish for dinner in these ponds there's big fish in there anyway uh while I while we were going around the property I found this house you find houses on the on the property now uh this is a cement house there was a contractor up in the mountains there that um about 80 years ago or so made hundreds of these you can see them all over it's a house basically for poor people uh this is it's it's


about 400 square ft has two bedrooms that are 9 by 12 and then uh there's a little porch here that's 5T deep there's an all purpose room that's a living room dining room everything room that is also 9 by1 12 and a kitchen that's 9 by7 and no indoor bathroom uh I decided I found this the structure is fine I've got this problem where uh you know instead of bulldozing something if it's in good condition I would rather uh fix it rehabilitate it and improve it and so that's what I've been doing and here's


that same house today I added a two-car garage the two-car garage has more square footage than the original house I kicked out this little area one foot so that where the couch goes uh it's 10 feet wide instead of 9 ft wide so that I can have a big screen TV that's not in my face I enclose the porch and then um uh I it's all solar powered there's 32 solar panels and a solar water heater and nine I'm sorry three Tesla power walls this is the house originally from the side uh and you can see I mean it


wasn't supposed to be a sod roof but it turned into it with the just the deposits of all these leaves and the decaying uh organic material grows a bunch of other stuff and here is the house today so I added a kitchen that's about 15 ft long on the back it's it's still only 9 ft wide uh and then the one luxury that I've got here is a really nice bathroom uh bathrooms only about 9 by9 but two of the walls are glass and they fold back and so where this bamboo ends you have an absolutely private view


this is my Mountain I hope to build a house up there one day a glass house with just a spectacular amazing view uh but for now I've got this absolutely private View and I've got a rain shower in the ceiling so I can take a shower basically Outdoors but with a a roof above me a little bit uh and this solar water heater I could shower for an hour at midnight and not run out of hot water uh so here it is again with this beautiful rainbow uh the weather up there is changing all the time and uh it is just


so amazingly spectacular this is uh Nicholas's house he decided to leave his house the 400 square fet uh but he made the what was originally the kitchen into his bathroom and then made a kitchen outside because in Puerto Rico especially up at this Ranch you want to live outside as much as possible even when it's raining it's great as long as it's not raining with a windstorm uh and then I designed these shutters out they're just 2x4 uh but you close and and they're Charming looking you close those you


pull this 2x4 out of these uh steel hooks that are on the and you slide them through some steel hooks on the outside and you're ready for a hurricane uh this is a weather station we've got microwave internet and we've got starlink so we've got redundant internet uh and so when everybody else when there's a power outage and you can see from my Mountaintop it turns black for Miles all around and then a few homes come on with generators and uh and ours never goes out uh they all lose Internet we don't


because when the power goes out in our in our area so does the big internet antenna the microwave antenna that picks that is broadcasting all of the internet information uh this is the original condition of what we call the cow building it's called The Cow building is because uh back in the 50s this was a dairy farm and before that I think it was a sugar cane plantation and um you can see all of the damage from Hurricane Maria every building on the seven buildings were extremely damaged uh and


had been abandoned for years so there's Vines growing through them and everything and uh uh that's the reason I was able to get this property that is in an area where it can fund it can have profit that can fund this experiment of of or of carbon negative farming uh and trying to make it more profitable but in that Quest we have to sustain that uh with profits and uh and so this can be profitable as you saw from the last video but one of the problems here all of this was asbest and I didn't want any


asbestos on the property and so uh this is the original condition uh we cleared away enough of the undergrowth here to where we could get a closeup look at it and I'm saying oh my a and back I actually didn't do one minute's work on this you hire other people for this kind of stuff but it has been uh quite an expenditure to start rehabilitating this and so this is one of this is a storage room in it so it it just it looked like this all over the place this is an aftershot uh during the con con


construction of that same room now this is the back side of the building and this man here his name is mamat he is from Russia uh he speaks Russian and Spanish he's been in Puerto Rico for many years uh the Spanish that he speaks though is mixed with like 20 25% Russian words so most people don't understand what he's saying uh except my Ranch manager Nicola Nicola spaza was born in Bulgaria under communism when school was taught in Russian and so he can't really speak Russian today but he


understands enough to be and then he speaks uh Bulgarian uh English and Spanish fluently and so he can listen to Mamet and translate to me it's pretty funny but this guy is in his mid 70s he's strong as a horse and he uh he teaches kids Acro btics for a living that's what he does for a regular living and uh then periodically uh he's a circus performer specializing in the tight RPP and every time we go past a pair of high-rise buildings he's envisioning stringing a wire between


them illegally and doing a Philipe petite for a couple of hours if you don't know who Philipe petite is you need to do an internet search on him uh he he's a French Highwire artist that strung a wire illegally snuck in past all the security in the World Trade Center and got out there and spent a few hours so many hundreds of feet above Manhattan with the police trying to get him to come back in and uh it's quite a story and there's a documentary on him I believe on Netflix uh this is the HazMat


team starting to remove the roof and and get rid of all of that uh that uh asbest and they're halfway through it here uh and then all of the asbestos is gone uh the steel structure this is all steel and reinforced concrete so we removed any oxidation off of the steel and then uh primered it with uh this the primer paint that keeps it from rusting uh and filled in the trench that you would get down into for milking the cows and we don't really know what this building will be yet this was like a laundry room


or something and this is a bathroom uh but this room up in the front is like 20x 20 or 24x 24 it's the only room I've got a vision for and maybe it doesn't end up in this room but we need a scientific laboratory we need to be able to look at soil samples and look at the dirt the mineral content and any pollutants in the dirt we need to be able to look at the soil and see what the microbiology is the fungus the bacteria all the rest of the microbes uh the pH of everything and then we also need equipment to be able


to take a tomato or a cucumber or something like that and know what the vitamins and minerals are and then as we're doing our taste testing we can start correlating uh the flavors of things to the vitamins and the minerals that are in them you know chlorophyll has this that very green flavor like your Mor mode lawn and vitamin C uh has uh that uh tart acidic flavor like lemons uh so uh we should be able to start identifying other nutrients uh and and very easily starting to breed for them and create this very healthy


tasty food and I'm going to be selling it locally so we don't have to engineer a tomato that has 5 mph bumpers on it uh you know 5 mph bumpers cars in the 70s had these big things you could bang into a pole or another car at 5 m hour and sustain no damage tomatoes are now engineered to be picked thousands of miles away green uh put on trucks and then on trains and for Puerto Rico ships and then when it gets here weeks later uh they expose it to ethylene gas and the green tomato turns red and they sell


it it's a red bag of water with no nutrition in it and as I said in my last video we are poisoning the soil and the plants so we're growing sick plants that then we eat and become sick and uh so we can heal heal the body and heal the planet simultaneously with this project so this is taken from the window on the front of it and you can see this this uh area right here is that store room that was all junky uh and then uh you know the Upper Floor I think what they had in here before was the equipment uh for the


Su you know the the vacuum equipment for uh putting on the little suction devices on the cow's udder to suck the milk up there and then that large room which is here uh was probably where they did pasteurizing and bottling and then you had a store room for like all the bottles and things like that uh today uh we've got 20 solar panels on it already and two Tesla power walls and we will be adding more capacity as needed so I don't know what this is going to be but we've got security doors on it and this


super thick laminated high impact hurricane glass with an automatic shutter that comes down in front of it and uh and I haven't got the garage doors on here yet but we don't know if this is going to be like uh uh processing and packaging and Refrigeration but it's probably you know just pull in farm vehicles and plug them in at night so that they're charged in the morning um this is a house that was near the front of the property uh the roof is completely gone it had like an inch of water I think there were some


lily pads growing inside this house uh the about a third of it has a tin roof that's all peeling off here it was basically destroyed uh in Hurricane Maria part of the reason that I was able to pick up the the property for a song this is the house today day it's a 10 bedroom Four B two kitchen house and so this is what I call it we were originally calling it a bunk house for workers workman's bunk house but this could be uh for many more things I want to attract bright Minds so with room and


board we may be able to get a bunch of volunteers up there trying to solve these problems and you're living in Paradise it's beautiful one big problem though look in here this the main main room once you put doors on it there's this one window that's in a shady area so it would have required running lights all day long very often it clouds over like this at noon or 2 and uh and so we'd be running lights all day long depleting the batteries this has two Tesla power walls and and 20 solar


panels on it now so I came up with this invention I call light chimneys these uh basically like a chimney uh except it's painted bright white white inside and you put a skylight on the top so there they are coming down as skylights into the main room and we've got a couple of the skylights mounted here and they're like 4x4 uh holes through the Second Story down to the first story and these uh um the skylights are electrically operated they've got Motors in them and uh when you when they're closed when


it's cool uh the light makes that room bright and Airy now they work incredibly well and then if you crack them just a little you don't need to actually expose the you don't have to open them up like that picture uh you can crack them from being closed and open them up just a little so that there's a flow what happens is they turn into thermal chimneys and they evacuate all the warm air that collects on the ceiling and the the cement gets cold at night it in the uh cool season it can get down to 50° at


night up here um it can get up to 85 uh in the hot season except when you open these the the cement on the ceiling never heats up so you don't get the warm the room warming up in the afternoon and creating heat you can go in there at 400 p.m. and it's 10° cooler in that living room because all of the walls stay uh cool from overnight and so it's we don't have to run air conditioners in this place it's it's phenomenal uh what's going on this was another building that we never tried to


rehabilitate uh a work one of the workers on the previous uh owner you know when the previous owners had it uh was here and it was all wood except for two walls this outside wall and one more wall that uh creates a bathroom that was 3 and 1/2 ft wide when you sit on the toilet your knees are practically touching the other wall and um and so it's got a tiny little shower at the end when we first moved up there uh you know to start this process we were intense it was camping uh and this was the only we were able to get


running water to this and so it was the only place where we had a sink a shower and a toilet and uh uh then Nicola came up with this great idea and he created a water heater by taking uh some 500t spools of Hose like garden hose uh and you can connect two of them together and make a thousand foot spool and then you bury it in a compost pile and you put a tarp over it and the bacteria in there causes it to go up to about 120 degrees and you've got a hot shower it's quite amazing uh and it's


got a window in the back with a view out toward the river uh this area was uh there was this was a coffee drying and sorting area for coffee beans behind this was another bu building for um uh peeling and husking the coffee beans and then Behind these uh uh this Greenery here there were these big uh stainless steel machines that were about 12 feet in diameter and uh it would blow hot air underneath this perforated steel that all the coffee beans were on in there these big things that stirred the coffee


beans and dried them and then they go through this red machine here and they get sorted into their various sizes and then they go on to tables and people would handpick out all of the bad beans you know you can see by the color then they get bagged and sent off to the coffee roasters so this was the only area with an intact roof that we could use and so at first this is uh where we camped to be able to uh uh be on the farm and and work on it and then later this became something we call the Community Kitchen uh we've got you know


solar panels and Tesla power walls and I had them hang these icicle uh Christmas lights basically but they give and they're incandescent we didn't go with LEDs LEDs do not have full spectrum they always look the light is semi phony we're going to have to go with LED lighting in all of the houses to preserve the power but uh for this it's still very low power but I went with incandescent when you Dim it it becomes more yellow and warm uh and it's absolutely wonderful so we've got a


couple of refrigerators and a range with an oven but almost all the time we cook over fire there's some potatoes in here uh even like I said you want to be outside even when it's raining this is the rain coming off of this roof it's just pouring out sometimes somewhere between noon and 2 2 or 3:00 uh in the rainy season May through uh uh October uh it'll rain for somewhere between 15 minutes and and an hour or two every once in a while you get a day that's like 50% rain but um uh


so the a burst like this can happen for just 15 minutes but it's still best to be outdoors uh and our horse the horses they I'll show you they are rescued Dan uh found them on the edges outskirts of his golf course uh but um we don't have any Stables or pens or Corrals or paddocks there's uh we don't need them the horses just wander around anywhere they want to go on the ranch they can't get there's no trails to get out to the road or anything like that so they're


safe and uh uh they came from I'll show you from hell and now they're living in heaven on Earth uh and their you know horses are these big very uh benign peaceful animals that are somewhat inquisitive and so you know you'll be cooking and you get a nudge on your back and you turn around oh hello they don't spend all their time in the kitchen they just wander in say hello and leave uh and uh they but here's one of them saying hey Nicola get me a beer out of the refrigerator and


Nicola says okay actually they'll smell a beer they don't really drink it um and so this is one of the rescues what uh a lot of people in Puerto Rico that want a horse but can't really afford a horse and don't have a place to put a horse they buy a horse anyway and then they tie it to a tree uh on the outskirts skirts of like a golf course or something they come and visit it and use it once a week and what happens is the horse uh eats away all of the the grass uh where it's tied up and then ends up


trapped right by the tree it gets its Hooves Tangled Up In branches or in uh or in the ropes and it sits there and starves to death no water no food so Dan fills up water containers on the back of a golf cart and brings them water and food and this is uh Nicola now the horses are up on the ranch uh he the horse is just smelling the beer uh about once every day or two or three uh the horses just wander over to the Orange Grove now we found the Orange Grove I was looking on Google Earth going back in time I was looking


for uh coffee trees because we were getting the farm appraised and I wanted it to get appraised for more than I bought it for so I was trying to prove that this could be a workable Farm again and uh I was looking for rows of anything on the ranch and what I found was an area that had these bumps that were in rows and so uh we had to uh hire a bulldozer and uh re recut a road that was about a mile and a half long to this area and what we found were 47 17 orange trees uh there were more than that there


were like five or 600 but many of them had died uh they were all completely covered with vines and it took two guys two two days to liberate each orange tree so uh because you had to cut the vines out of them pull them out and then get on ladders and actually scrub all of the bmil ads lyans and Moss that was on every single Branch so every single Branch had to be scrubbed with a wire brush uh but you stress some a plant like this to the to the edge of its life and then give it sunlight and nourishment again and when it comes back


these are of the best oranges you've ever tasted they are amazing and they are 100% organic so here is uh coetta with her baby uh having lunch and then the baby taking a nap well her mother uh trims and fertilizes for us you know we used to for a year or two we had a full-time uh uh trimmer guy with like a weed whack going around different parts of the farm and he'd have to uh do that all of the time we do something called Chop and drop this was all like 8 to 10 feet high in Greenery and you chop it down


and all of the uh people that worked for it said you've got to rake it all up and put it in piles and and get rid of it and we Nicholas says no you don't do that leave it here and so they left it and they were amazed because we came back 3 months later and there was no Greenery they were expecting to have to do it all over again every 3 months and here it was just perfect still because of the chop and drop technique so now we've added uh some uh animals to the process and it's been wonderful and so


uh that is heaven on Earth if you're afraid of horses uh don't be if you've got the right horses they're just these big loving inquisitive animals uh that won't hurt you we did have a couple of goats for a while we don't anymore this was L uh he's a pretty cool goat uh we do have about 100 Ducks Five Horses five dogs five cats a few turkeys uh and a couple of geese I believe uh so here's a a puppy you know seeing the sun uh setting from The Mountaintop now dogs don't have a big exp attention span you


take them to a place where you should be in awe of the beauty for hours on end and after just 2 minutes they've seen it all and uh they're ready to go and so uh are we going somewhere can we go home now uh the roads are good enough now to where I could drive my Tesla up there which is great because you roll the windows down you're rolling along in silence and all you hear are these little Cokey frogs that we've got that go and um and and the other Wildlife bugs and things like that and then you get up


to the top and I'm doing that these are autocross tires these are barely street legal racing tires they're like a racing slick with grooves cut in them uh they're Toyo R1 RS for anybody that's interested and uh they're not meant for dirt or mud but uh I can I can easily drive this car up to the up to my mountain now uh and the sunsets from up there are just awe inspiring it is amazing every once in a while I get a photograph texted to me from Nicola that says I just saw the most amazing Sunset


of my life thank you so much because he's so appreciative of being able to live in this environment it is amazing and I can't wait you know if there's a payoff from this thing I do want to build a house up on this mountain peak and experience uh this you know when I I have I've had different companies in one of them I was manufacturing high-end audio equipment and my office was in a garage with no windows and florescent lights so for several years of my life I spent most of it inside this room with


no windows and fluorescent lights and I really would like to spend the last part of my life never missing a sunset again the weather up here changes very rapidly uh you're up at 3,200 ft on an island a cloud blows in and suddenly you're in this dense fog where down at these buildings below uh it's it's just a very overcast day uh so it changes rapidly but it is absolutely stunning it's amazing I call this the album cover uh this is like take us to your leader we just landed we're aliens now this is a


very long exposure and uh we're all holding a beer that's the reason our arms are like this but um these lights because it's a long exposure they overlap and it makes it look like this is really populated this is very sparsely populated little tiny towns and farms uh and that's where our the wind comes on Shore and brings on our rain which is the purest rain and so we've got the purest air and water you can get so come on up whoever gets this position uh we do have uh housing up there for


you it'll be in that bunk house at first later on if you've caused a profit uh we can build you a little cabin somewhere but I'm going to be living and my house is now 700 Square ft but my bedroom is going to be 9 ft by 12 ft this the reason for doing this is the mission not to live in the lap of luxury that comes later and so I've got this place that is probably the only place on Earth that can self-fund this Mission because of that high altitude and it's one of the only big farms up at at that altitude


there's a couple of other Farms but uh this one is the one that has the purest water and air and then all of the tax benefits in Puerto Rico and then carbon credits and then our uh our uh farm income being 90% tax exempt so help us accomplish this Mission by making this place profitable and now I leave you with some of the peace and Harmony and Tranquility that is Freedom Farms I want to thank you for watching for


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