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SPINOFF: What kind of farmer would you like to be?

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  • SPINOFF: What kind of farmer would you like to be?

    As a spinoff from the OT topic of if you know a real farmer, let's say you could become a farmer yourself . . . what kind of farmer would you be?

    Horses - breeding, boarding, training?
    Sheep - lambs for meat or milk or sheep for wool?
    Cows - for meat or milk?
    Goat - for meat or milk?
    Fruit/vegetable/nuts?
    Honey bees?
    Hay or some kind of grain crop?
    Some other by-product of above? (soap or wool or lotions or candles or???)

    Mr. PoPo has always wanted to be a sheep farmer - because he says lamb tastes so good. I don't know if I could do that or not! But perhaps I could milk them and make cheese . . . but then you'd have to sell off some lambs for slaughter I guess or you'd just end up with too many sheep!

    If you ARE a farmer, how did you get into it? Would you rather farm something else? Do you enjoy your farming lifestyle?
    "A horse's face always conveys clearly whether it is loved by its owner or simply used." - Anja Beran

  • #2
    I married into it. DH and I have a 600 cow dairy. I grew up out in the country raised horses but nothing else.

    Now we have chickens and pigs. DS has asked for a sheep, but DH says we have to get at least 5, so I guess we are going in to the sheep business, most likely for wool, although I'm sure we will eat the male lambs.

    I am so ready to embrace a simpler lifestyle than what we already have. I joke we are homesteading, albeit with 599 more cows than necessary. In a perfect world, I would have 10 or so cows and make artisan cheese that commanded a high enough price we would not need any other income as homesteaders. DH, fortunately, has a good head on his shoulders, so we dairy farm!
    Originally posted by The Saddle
    Perhaps I need my flocking adjusted.

    Comment


    • #3
      We did a Tree Change over Christmas in 2003.

      What they say is true. If you want to make a small fortune being a farmer- start with a large fortune.

      Here cattle are better than sheep as the cattle defend their young. Lambs are susceptible to wild dogs and dingos.

      Beef cattle all the way. You bring them up twice a year to worm and when you wean calves.

      Milking no way as you have to bring them up twice a day to milk.

      We went with a Bazadais bull as famous for small calves so, finger's crossed, you don't have to be home. Unlike foals, calves can breathe through the birthing process, so you have half a day to help if they need it, not like a foal that only has what seems like minutes.

      We don't have snow, so our cattle live outside 24/7.

      We make our own hay. Grassy lucerne hay. You call that alfalfa and we don't have the afalfa beetle over here that I have heard can poison horses in America.

      Hubby is a mechanic, so we save thousands on labour. You need as much equipment to make 1 bale as you do to make 1000s of bales.

      Being a farmer means that the weather now means everything to you. You know how much sun you get, how often a cloud goes over the sun and how many mm of rain falls anywhere in the area.

      We need 3 days of sun in Summer and about 10 in Winter. You just try getting an accurate Weather forecast for that long.

      Mother Nature is not always kind and suicide is very high in the Farming world.

      At the moment we are dry farming. We are all set up for irrigating, but the electricity is now too expensive, so we only make it for ourselves. People only care about cheap hay not how it is made or what it costs the farmer.

      Hubby is now making a Dressage arena, so who knows what the future will bring. I might have to do something with horses on my own, as I type over 100 words a minute and am efficient in an office. I am also fit and strong but unable to find a job out here.
      It is better to ride 5 minutes a day than it is to ride 35 minutes on a Sunday.

      Comment


      • #4
        I'd do hay for sure. Maybe some other crops but I'm not sure what...definitely not tobacco.

        I would like to raise some of the endangered and heritage breeds of animals and sell locally on a small to medium scale. So no hundreds of head of anything but a herd of beef cows, chickens, rabbits...maybe pigs and sheep if I had the space and manpower.

        Comment


        • #5
          Not a farmer but have a small farm (20 acres). I would love to put a couple of acres into fruits/vegetables and have chickens for eggs and honey. I've actually done some research on it and doubt we could really make it profitable but would love to do black currants as my main crop. Beehives in with the bushes. Maybe specialty herbs as well (medicinal herbs, for example). Chicken tractors in with the horses in spring/summer/fall and parked at the barn through winter.

          Might move in that direction a little at a time but not sure it would really be possible to make a living. My dh works, though, so between the two we could make it work.

          Comment


          • #6
            I'd love one day to have 20 - 30 acres and a small homestead. Maybe raise some lambs for meat, and hunt. Try to grow most of my own fruit/ veggies and get into canning. Not be a total hermit, but well positioned to survive the zombie apocalypse : )

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by S1969 View Post
              Not a farmer but have a small farm (20 acres). I would love to put a couple of acres into fruits/vegetables and have chickens for eggs and honey. I've actually done some research on it and doubt we could really make it profitable but would love to do black currants as my main crop. Beehives in with the bushes. Maybe specialty herbs as well (medicinal herbs, for example). Chicken tractors in with the horses in spring/summer/fall and parked at the barn through winter.

              Might move in that direction a little at a time but not sure it would really be possible to make a living. My dh works, though, so between the two we could make it work.
              Just wanted to mention, while that is an interesting idea, for now, honey doesn't generally come from chickens.

              Maybe someone will engineer a chicken that gives us honey eggs.
              Now that would be sweet.

              Comment


              • #8
                Wish I had more acreage in hay.
                My piddly little 5ac farmette is good for ~100+ bales when across-the-road neighbors cut & bale the perimeter.
                Keeps the place looking civilized & they sell the hay.
                Livestock (besides 2 horses) is 4 hens, barn cat & 3 gold"trout" that reside in a 44gal stocktank in my backyard.
                I do have a mini-orchard: 3 apple & 2 pear trees & 1 dwarf peach in my veggie plot. That is plenty farming for me!
                If I had "staff", I might want more. But doing it all solo I'm at my limit.
                *friend of bar.ka*RIP all my lovely boys, gone too soon:
                Steppin' Out 1988-2004
                Hey Vern! 1982-2009, Cash's Bay Threat 1994-2009
                Sam(Jaybee Altair) 1994-2015

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                • #9
                  While I adore dairy cattle, they are much too labor intensive and you can't get decent help. I'd love some beef cattle, but I'd have to change the farm around a bit to be able to work them.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Being a farmer is the most rewarding job/career/lifestyle there is. It's not easy, but it is the most rewarding.

                    We raise beef cattle, corn, soybeans, and hay. I love and despise all of it! Wouldn't change any of it, though!

                    (Although, I wish I had the time and ability to grow more vegetables. I can grow acres and acres of row crops, but can't hardly keep the inherited asparagus behind the house alive...)

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      The kind who inherited 10,000 acres.
                      DIY Journey of Remodeling the Farmette: http://weownblackacre.blogspot.com/

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        The Farmer before us let a guy put some hives on our Farm.

                        He had to get him to take them away.

                        During a drought the bees took over the water troughs and the cattle couldn't drink.
                        It is better to ride 5 minutes a day than it is to ride 35 minutes on a Sunday.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Veggies and herbs. I actually considered doing some heirloom trees. There are farmers who plant and maintain different, "non commercial" varieties of plants to keep the biodiversity available for the future. For instance, there are 100 different kinds of apples but only about 6 types are commercially produced. There are farmers who keep the other gene lines going. That appeals to me because I wouldn"t have to deal with market pressures.
                          -- Member of the COTH Appendix QH clique and the dressage-saddle-thigh-block-hating clique.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Which thread do I belong in? Lol.

                            But to try and fit in this one, I'd love a 40 acre property. Some wooded for the pigs. Then pastures for the horses and a bit more land for the sheep. Maybe a section separate for a stable and boarded horses. An indoor arena would be nice, even if small. Need to get all the fancy equipment, like sheep chutes and head gates and tilters. Then a large section for corn, tomatoes, pumpkin, cucumbers, potatoes and maybe some other things. Oh, and a hay barn w/hay fields! Then all the heavy equipment I'd need! Or at least make a deal with locals who could hay it for me...

                            hmm, if only I could win the lotto...

                            What constitutes a 'real farmer'?
                            I'm a farmer who also has pet horses.

                            I define a farmer as someone who raises plants or animals as food. Anything else is not a farmer. So having a boarding stable isn't a farmer, breeding dogs for $ is milling, etc.

                            I have sheep, pigs and rabbits. I had these in the past, goats, ducks, chickens & guineas.

                            Though, all are treated like spoiled pets...so no one from the outside would really believe any are meant for the table.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              We're more "hobby farmers" as my DH has a full time job in addition to what we grow here. We grow and sell Christmas trees (NC mountains), and have a large garden (some to eat and some to sell/give away), usually keep two horses/ponies, and are planning on raising meat goats to sell and help with brush clearing. We're also planning on planting apple and pear trees, but one step at a time. (We're still relatively new at this.)

                              Comment


                              • #16
                                I guess it's not quite "farming", but still agriculture, but grape vines and orchard trees for wine making. (Commercial scale, not personal.) I like the idea of animals but I don't have the temperament to raise them for meat. My goats and duck are pets.
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                                • #17
                                  I wouldn't like to be commercial farmer, other than selling maybe afew things at local farmer's markets, but I'd like to organically grow heirloom, forgotten vegetables and fruit, and herbs, both for cooking and healing. Maybe have a few chickens for eggs. I don't think I could raise animals for meat. Same with bees, I love honey but wouldn't be able to have hives of my own.
                                  Ottbs - The finish line is only the beginning!

                                  Comment


                                  • #18
                                    Originally posted by danceronice View Post
                                    I like the idea of animals but I don't have the temperament to raise them for meat. My goats and duck are pets.
                                    I understand exactly what you mean. This is going to be a trial run for us. I tend to get attached to anything with fur, so we won't be doing any butchering ourselves. It's more like a family 4-H project, except that the live goats will be for sale publicly instead of at auction. We'll see how it goes.

                                    Comment


                                    • #19
                                      I would love to get another farm and have black angus, pigs, chickens for eggs/meat, hay fields, vegetable garden, and a greenhouse.

                                      Comment


                                      • #20
                                        A money farmer!

                                        But seriously, we are just trying to be sustainable. We are just getting our garden going, and we have chickens, and lease part of our pasture to house honey bees in the summer. I'm super excited to see how my compost looks in the spring, so I can put it on the garden. I'd love to raise fiber sheep, but we have too many predators.
                                        Last edited by LovelyBay; Dec. 10, 2014, 10:33 PM.
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