
Join us for an inside look at how modern pivot automation is revolutionizing agriculture.
What You’ll Learn in this Webinar:
How to save water without sacrificing yield
Discover how Tanner and his team use pivot control to respond to changing weather in real-time—turning pivots off when conditions are poor and restarting them remotely when it matters most.
How to reduce labor and reclaim your time
Before automation, it took hours and multiple team members to check pivots, troubleshoot issues, and adjust irrigation. Now, it’s done in minutes from a phone—freeing up time for higher-value work on the farm.
How to improve operational efficiency and lower costs
Tanner will walk you through how B-hyve controllers integrate with new and old pivot brands alike, centralize control, simplify employee training, and deliver powerful data insights for smarter farming decisions.
How to manage pivots from anywhere, anytime
Learn how to control even 45-year-old pivots from a smartphone—and why flexibility and responsiveness have become a game-changer for day-to-day operations.
How to use real-time data and history logs to optimize irrigation
Whether you’re managing a few pivots or dozens, this is a conversation you don’t want to miss. See how one farm embraced innovation to become more sustainable, more productive, and more profitable, without replacing its existing infrastructure.
Register now! Bring your questions. Tanner will be sharing real stories, lessons learned, and practical advice you can use this season.
Tanner Holt is a BYU-educated CPA and farmer based in Utah. At Holt Farms—encompassing both crop and dairy operations—he plants corn, alfalfa, and triticale. The farm leverages water-conserving techniques—such as intercropping triticale with alfalfa and tracking well use with meters—to reduce water usage in a region that’s expected to lose ~50% of its water over the next century. Holt Dairy is part of the family’s agricultural enterprise and is recognized for being among the larger, more technologically advanced dairy farms in the area. The dairy implements sustainable practices drawn from crop experiments to conserve resources on-site. Tanner became locally famous when he proposed to his wife using an alfalfa field message—“Will you marry me?”—visible from a man-lift over 180 feet tall. And now today a father of 4 children, Tanner’s goal is goal to pass along a sustainable operation for them and their futures.