by rwwff » Wed 26 Jul 2006, 22:18:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'W')hy plow? It isn't necessary.
Read Masanobu Fukuoka's books about no-plow grain farming. Should save you a hell of a lot of work from the looks of it!
I have considered it... But in a case where you need the cash crop to pay the taxes at the end of the year, I have no historical confidence in the method. In the coming years I will make the attempt to learn more about it.
That said, I estimate to keep the farm, I should plan on needing to generate at least 1000 bushels of corn specifically for sale, for dollars, to immediately hand to the county tax accessor collector. So you get into the problem of certainty. Agony + mule + plow + corn seed + 15 tilled acres in East Texas gets safely passed that requirement.. WIth nitrogen fertilizer as the only external input, I can get quite a ways passed that, but it has to be cost effective, and I'd be nervous building any long range plan based upon its availability.
This is of course very simplified in the details, and external economic variables will play a large part in shaping how it works as to what to plant, what inputs are cost effective, and (most diifficult), how to market a quantity that is both large and small, like 1000 bushels over two harvests.
I absolutely want to avoid any consideration of "boutique" agriculture. That stuff only works when there's only a few people doing it; try doing that with 9,000 square miles worth of farmers, and its all boo and no teak.