Ellendra Nauriel wrote:The transition from "large garden" to "small farm" requires a ton of time, labor, and equipment. That equipment can easily run tens of thousands of dollars, sometimes hundreds of thousands. Banks want proof of income before they'll give people loans, but it takes a while for a new farm to establish its income. That means, even if an aspiring farmer gets access to land, they still have an enormous hurdle in their way.
I've been trying to make that transition for 8 years now. I'm still nowhere close.
One way to help aspiring farmers would be to get the same type of small harvesting equipment that's available in Asia, and make it available here at an affordable price. Because having a machine to harvest my beans would mean I could grow an acre or more, instead of being limited to what I can harvest by hand. The seed company I grow for wants 100-400 pounds of it per year! The most I've been able to pick and clean was around 20 pounds, and that was with doing no other farm work.
I've been working on coming up with designs for equipment that would work on my existing tractor, but I also don't have anywhere to build my prototypes, so it's just theory. You find a company that can make or import small harvesting equipment, at a price normal people can afford, and you'll see the ranks of successful small farmers explode.
Adam said, "Meanwhile, I can pick weeds for wealthy people and charge $50 an hour for me and my helpers time. A bank will see that I am making money and will finance all the equipment I want.
Invasive plants are Earth's way of insisting we notice her medicines. Stephen Herrod Buhner
Everyone learns what works by learning what doesn't work. Stephen Herrod Buhner
A build too cool to miss:Mike's GreenhouseA great example:Joseph's Garden
All the soil info you'll ever need:
Redhawk's excellent soil-building series
Weeds are just plants with enough surplus will to live to withstand normal levels of gardening!--Alexandra Petri
Adam Geriak wrote:Hi all,
I've just created a blog post regarding the question of Why is it so hard to get into farming? What is the root cause of these struggles?
I've come down to monetary and government policy.
In the blog post I share some relevant charts to show the extent of the problem.
Other blog posts also involve land management, usually discussing home scale stuff like holistic lawn care and the value of great insulation over your gardens.
I hope this information falls upon some some people that can value it.
https://www.monardagarden.com/news
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