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posted by mrpg on Sunday November 26 2017, @04:04PM   Printer-friendly
from the count-me-in dept.

Original URL: A growing number of young Americans are leaving desk jobs to farm

Liz Whitehurst dabbled in several careers before she ended up here, crating fistfuls of fresh-cut arugula in the early-November chill.

The hours were better at her nonprofit jobs. So were the benefits. But two years ago, the 32-year-old Whitehurst — who graduated from a liberal arts college and grew up in the Chicago suburbs — abandoned Washington for this three-acre farm in Upper Marlboro, Md.

[...] This new generation can't hope to replace the numbers that farming is losing to age. But it is already contributing to the growth of the local-food movement and could help preserve the place of midsize farms in the rural landscape.

"We're going to see a sea change in American agriculture as the next generation gets on the land," said Kathleen Merrigan, the head of the Food Institute at George Washington University and a deputy secretary at the Department of Agriculture under President Barack Obama. "The only question is whether they'll get on the land, given the challenges."

The number of farmers age 25 to 34 grew 2.2 percent between 2007 and 2012, according to the 2014 USDA census, a period when other groups of farmers — save the oldest — shrunk by double digits. In some states, such as California, Nebraska and South Dakota, the number of beginning farmers has grown by 20 percent or more.


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  • (Score: 2) by PartTimeZombie on Sunday November 26 2017, @09:18PM (13 children)

    by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Sunday November 26 2017, @09:18PM (#601837)

    Those are all very good questions, and the point that struck me in the article is that the women work a 3 acre farm.

    Where I come from that is nowhere near big enough to make a living, and would be considered a lifestyle block, (a really, really small one).

    As a comparison, my brother lives on 10 acres and makes enough money from the few sheep and beef cattle he fattens up each year to pay his insurance and land taxes, so there is some financial benefit, but he still needs to work a job in town.

    I'm guessing vegetable growing is more lucrative, but the bulk of their income is from subsidies.

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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by frojack on Sunday November 26 2017, @09:41PM (4 children)

    by frojack (1554) on Sunday November 26 2017, @09:41PM (#601848) Journal

    On the other hand, you can almost live and raise a family off of what you can grow on three acres. 5 or 8 would be better. Then you would have room for a small barn, couple of cows and chicken coop.

    --
    No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
    • (Score: 2) by qzm on Sunday November 26 2017, @10:23PM (3 children)

      by qzm (3260) on Sunday November 26 2017, @10:23PM (#601858)

      Ummm. No. No you cannot.
      Not even close.
      You really don't have any clue about farming, do you?

      What these people are doing is a lifestyle, not a job.
      3 acres would barely feed a small family on average, let alone anything else.
      It is a large back yard, not a farm.

      I am sure they enjoy doing it, and feel good about themselves, however it has very little to do with farming.

      • (Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Sunday November 26 2017, @11:28PM (1 child)

        by bzipitidoo (4388) on Sunday November 26 2017, @11:28PM (#601875) Journal

        That's right. 3 acres is a joke, a veggie garden, not a real farm. Anyone who thinks otherwise is woefully clueless.

        In the 1930s, my grandfather farmed 80 acres in Iowa with a team of horses, and even then that was small. With the arrival of the tractor on their farm in 1939, they needed to expand. Needed 160 acres, minimum. Instead, my grandfather kept farming on just 80 acres and took a job as a postman, while my grandmother got a job as a schoolteacher. Today, you need at least 500 acres, if you have livestock. If you're only going to grow crops, you need 1000 acres. There's no freaking way a few people can cover that much ground without serious farming equipment.

        The sorts of stuff you see in food commercials, of people walking up and down the rows carrying sacks from which to sow seeds by hand, or swinging scythes to harvest grain, is extremely antiquated nonsense.

        • (Score: 3, Insightful) by aclarke on Monday November 27 2017, @01:43AM

          by aclarke (2049) on Monday November 27 2017, @01:43AM (#601908) Homepage

          No, no, no. See my other comment.

          You need 1000 acres if you're farming like the kind of farmer who needs 1000 acres. Think like a farmer who only has three acres, and your viewpoint changes.

      • (Score: 3, Insightful) by aclarke on Monday November 27 2017, @01:41AM

        by aclarke (2049) on Monday November 27 2017, @01:41AM (#601907) Homepage
        See title. There are quite a few farmers out there successfully making good money farming small spaces. See this guy on YouTube [youtube.com] for just one example. Actually I found that one while looking for another one I know where the guy grossed $350k a couple years ago by leasing unused urban land and growing food on it. You can't apply 1000 acre farming to three acres. But you can certainly change the game and make good money farming small spaces.
  • (Score: 3, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 26 2017, @10:55PM (7 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 26 2017, @10:55PM (#601864)

    Well, you have to do a good job of selecting your crops and finding markets for those.
    This guy [wikipedia.org] was a bit of a legend in the field of farming in the city.

    [Urban homesteader Jules] Dervaes had a one-fifth acre lot in Pasadena, California, on which he and his family raised three tons of food per year. This provided 75 percent of their annual food needs, 99 percent of their produce, and helped them sustain an organic produce business. They also raised ducks, chickens, goats, bees, compost worms, and are running an aquaponics fish experiment.
    [...]
    According to Natural Home magazine, "The Dervaeses' operation is about 60 to 150 times as efficient as their industrial competitors, without relying on chemical fertilizers and pesticides."

    In addition to growing a significant amount of food, the Derveas family attempted to live off-grid as far as possible and have invested significant amounts of money to experiment with other ways of attaining self-sufficiency. They have 12 solar panels on the roof of the house, a biodiesel filling station in the garage, and a solar oven in the backyard; they use a wastewater reclamation system, a dual-flush toilet, a composting toilet, and a number of hand-cranked kitchen appliances (to reduce power consumption). They also use solar drying and have a cob oven.

    .
    Today [armoudian.com] on her "Scholars' Circle" broadcast/webcast, [kpfk.org] on Pacifica Radio, Prof. Maria Armoudian interviewed farm boy turned city boy turned farmer Will Allen, author of Good Food Revolution.
    A major topic was building proper soil without using petrochemicals (with an emphasis again on worms).
    N.B. His disciples are even doing this in the city and they do that ON TOP OF concrete/asphalt because of the contaminants that are in the even-worse stuff that is under that.

    The 2nd half hour of the program has food activist Prof. Raj Patel and Saru Jayaraman JD, founding director of the UC Berkeley Food Labor Research Center.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

    • (Score: 3, Informative) by Gaaark on Monday November 27 2017, @02:41AM (6 children)

      by Gaaark (41) on Monday November 27 2017, @02:41AM (#601919) Journal

      Square foot gardening gave me a pretty good yield a year ago while my wife's growing in rows (and walking between the rows) yielded less per foot. Definitely disturbing the soil as little as you can, and treating it organically and with good compost helps.
      But it IS work, and between work and our son, i found it too much, really, for us to maintain, so this year i switched to growing the asparagus i planted 2 years ago and last year (next year i will get my first harvest) and potatoes.

      Got a nice yield of potatoes and next year will get a fair amount of asparagus, and THAT yield will go up for the next 20 years, hoping.

      I'm planning on expanding my potato farm, and between the asparagus, the potatoes and what my wife grows, we should be doing pretty well in our back yard.
      When i retire, that all may expand.

      Won't reach the yields of the guy you're talking about though.

      --
      --- Please remind me if I haven't been civil to you: I'm channeling MDC. ---Gaaark 2.0 ---
      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @05:07AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @05:07AM (#601946)

        Clearly, you need to concentrate more on acquiring earthworms.
        (Contact Les Nessman.) [google.com]
        ...or go completely nuts. [google.com]

        -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @06:57PM (4 children)

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @06:57PM (#602138)

        Most aliums are pretty good "leave-alone" plants, if you're looking to grow more without much work. Plant into mulch if you're after bulbs (or use a topsetting variety), and the best thing is they like the shade so you don't have to use to your nice sunny spots. Even if you don't plant them, original owner's recommendation of building soil is good. Start building raised beds now (if you've got years to do it, use wood, leaves, lawn clippings, cat and dog shit, anything that will decompose, just keep piling it up!) so that you don't have to bend over so much when you're ready to garden more intensively again.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @09:43PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @09:43PM (#602190)

          The recommendations I've heard specifically say to avoid cat poop.
          It can contain human-threatening parasites. [google.com]
          (The heap won't get hot enough to destroy the eggs.)

          Now, if you're going to use your compost on house plants that don't produce edibles, pet poop is acceptable.

          The problem with putting anything non-plant-based into a compost heap is that it then tends to attract vermin.

          -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

        • (Score: 2) by Gaaark on Monday November 27 2017, @09:52PM (2 children)

          by Gaaark (41) on Monday November 27 2017, @09:52PM (#602193) Journal

          Oh yeah, raised beds all the way and i'm getting a tumbling composter for Christmas that i'll put near the back door for kitchen compost. I have a couple garbage cans and a couple pickle barrels full of leaves, clippings and some food.
          Just can't get enough compost!!!

          I was thinking i should make a solar oven to cook the dog poo: cook it til it HAS to be free of pathogens, lol.

          --
          --- Please remind me if I haven't been civil to you: I'm channeling MDC. ---Gaaark 2.0 ---
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @11:46PM (1 child)

            by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 27 2017, @11:46PM (#602237)

            2 of each would be even better: a just-started unit and a pretty-much-done unit.

            -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

            • (Score: 2) by Gaaark on Tuesday November 28 2017, @12:42AM

              by Gaaark (41) on Tuesday November 28 2017, @12:42AM (#602257) Journal

              I see you've met my girlfriend and my wife!

              :)
              I am in ssssooooooooooooo much trouble!!!!!

              Luceeeee, I'm home!!!! *Bammm!*

              --
              --- Please remind me if I haven't been civil to you: I'm channeling MDC. ---Gaaark 2.0 ---