| EDITOR'S
Note
Who are these Devault people, anyway? For starters,
George was long-time editor of the New Farm® magazine.
He's currently editor of the Russian version of New
Farm magazine. For more on Melanie, see her first column
on building
a cut flower business.
For a look at the Devault family's own farming history,
check out New
farm dreams do come true.
Finally, to order Joe Salatin's new book, You Can Farm,
which the Devaults refer to in this column, send a check
or money order for $30, postpaid, directly to the Salatins
at Polyface, Inc., Rt. 1, Box 281, Swoope, VA 24479. |
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| Got
any questions
for George and Melanie? Any topics you'd like
them to cover?
Click
here. |
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| Coming
next:
Land --
buying, renting or “borrowing” it, whether
you’re in the city, the suburbs or the country. |
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Why
a regular column for beginning farmers?
Two reasons:
First, many of you who've written us have specifically
asked for it.
Second, you're gonna need it. As the Devaullts say:
"Ahead of land,
money and equipment, the one thing
that all beginning farmers need is practical, profitable
information -- farmer-proven information -- on what
works, what doesn’t and why, where to find information,
who to believe, who not to believe and how to tell the
difference." |
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January 17, 2003: Why do people get so cranked
up about getting started in farming? Nothing could be easier. It’s
a no-brainer:
You get some land -- any old land will do -- scatter some seed
or turn a bunch of critters onto pasture, kick back with a cold
one and watch the dollars pour in. Right?
Yeah! Right!
Starting a business of any kind is tough enough these days. Starting
a farm is like building your own house, picking the right college
and planning a big church wedding, while working as a short-order
cook and competing in the Ironman Triathlon all at the same time.
All kidding aside, it can be done. You can get started in farming
today. We did it (see accompanying article, New
Farm Dreams Do Come True.) Lots of other people did or are doing
it successfully, organically and even sustainably. You can, too,
just as long as you know ahead of time exactly what you’re
getting yourself into and how to avoid many of the pitfalls that
lie along the way.
“For farm entrepreneurs, the opportunities for a farm family
business have never been greater. As the industrial agricultural
complex crumbles and our culture clambers for clean food, the countryside
beckons anew with profitable farming opportunities,” Joel
Salatin writes in the introduction to his latest book “You
Can Farm.”
Joel is right. You really can farm, whether you’re fresh
out of high school or college, considering a mid-life career change
or looking for something a bit more secure than Social Security
later in life.
You know generally what you want to do, but you’re not quite
sure exactly how to go about it. That’s why the Rodale Institute
and the editors at NewFarm.org felt it was absolutely essential
to have a regular column devoted solely to beginning farmers.
Ahead of land, money and equipment, the one thing that all beginning
farmers need is practical, profitable information -- farmer-proven
information -- on what works, what doesn’t and why, where
to find information, who to believe, who not to believe and how
to tell the difference.
“A good farmer in our times has to know more about more things
than a man in any other profession. He has to be a biologist, a
veterinary, a mechanic, a botanist, a horticulturist, and many other
things, and he has to have an open mind, eager and ready to absorb
new knowledge and new ideas and new ideals,” Louis Bromfield
wrote in “Pleasant Valley” in 1945.
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"Nothing that will be written here
is a recipe to be followed blindly. That’s one of the
many myths of modern agriculture -- one size does not fit all
in farming, never has and never will. Every farmer and every
farm is different." |
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Back then, about all you needed to get going was 100 acres and
a red-belly Ford. In comparison, today’s beginning farmer
must seem something like a rocket scientist.
This column will introduce you to the many ways you can farm. Nothing
that will be written here is a recipe to be followed blindly. That’s
one of the many myths of modern agriculture -- one size does not
fit all in farming, never has and never will. Every farmer and every
farm is different. What worked for one may -- or may not -- work
for you. But you can learn from each, adapt what fits and develop
a system that’s just right for you.
They don’t teach that at the land grant universities, package
it in Extension bulletins or sell it by the bag at the farm supply
store.
Another thing they don’t teach much is critical thinking,
seeking a second opinion or how to properly evaluate and act (or
not act) on information from salesmen, so-called experts, bureaucrats,
politicians and the like.
“It is becoming increasingly apparent that much of what is
wrong with agriculture today is the direct result of farmers being
guided by others whose goals and responsibilities are quite inappropriate
to agriculture,” wrote Frank Campbell Sr. of St. Catherines,
Ontario, in 1984 in the print days of The New Farm. He suggested
that our slogan “Take Charge of Your Farm” be placed
in the masthead of the magazine.
The absolute best information on farming comes from other farmers.
That’s because they know the real power of information. It
can make you or break you.
“Please, don’t look to me for all of the answers,”
Dick Thompson said in 1984 when more than 500 farmers from nine
states flocked to his Iowa farm for the first New Farm® field day
there. “Talk to the farmers next to you or behind you. You
can probably learn as much or more from them than you can from me.”
Like most farmers we’ve met over the years, Thompson takes
such things seriously. “People had questions everywhere. They
were really looking for answers. That puts quite a responsibility
on you because you don’t want to lead anybody astray. This
is not fun and games and show biz. This is the real world.”
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"Start small: Too many beginning farmers
we know enthusiastically start out to make it in farming only
to blow their life’s savings and become bitter and defeated.
That’s why this column will focus first and foremost on
nuts and bolts." |
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Unfortunately, non-farmers aren’t always in such close tough
with reality. Take all of information targeted toward beginning
farmers these days, and there is quite a mess of it. Do an internet
search, keyword “Beginning Farmer.” Most of what comes
up has to do with borrowing money -- megabucks -- hundreds of thousands
of dollars for land, equipment, buildings, seed and other inputs
for people who may have never grown a crop in their life.
Don’t buy it for a minute. That’s like putting a beginning
driver, a 16-year-old who just got a driver’s license, behind
the wheel of a new Rolls Royce -- with no insurance. Sooner rather
than later, that car is going to end up in a ditch, a total loss.
Think we’re kidding? Consider these items from “A Time
to Act,” the 1998 report of the United States Department of
Agriculture’s National Commission on Small Farms:
- “Today, we have 300,000 fewer farms than in 1979, and
farmers are receiving 13 percent less for every consumer dollar.”
- Three out of every four farms in the country (roughly 1.5 million)
are classified by USDA as “non-commercial,” meaning
that with gross sales of less than $50,000 a year they do not
earn enough money to stay in business on their own. Half of these
farmers (roughly 750,000) rely on off-farm income. So much for
the myth that you’re not a real farmer if you don’t
farm full-time.
- Even for farmers with gross sales of from $50,000 to $250,000
a year -- 86 percent of whom count farming as their primary occupation
-- “the average return on equity is negative.” In
that sales category, net cash income is only $23,159.
- “Farms with gross sales of under $250,000 (roughly 1.9
million) make up 94 percent of all farms. However, these farms
receive only 41 percent of all farm receipts. In other words,
out of 2 million farms, only 122,810 of the super-large farms
receive the majority of farm receipts.”
If you’re just starting out in farming, don’t know
much about it and have a “day job,” we strongly recommend
this: Don’t quit your day job. There is absolutely nothing
wrong with starting small and learning in the process.
Pay as you go. Study everything you can get your
hands on about farming, business, marketing and more. Your farming
library should contain more titles -- from the present day to the
1700s, if possible -- than your entire CD, DVD, LP, audio and video
tape collections combined.
If you have money saved and think you know a lot about farming
because you’ve been an avid home gardener, again: Don’t
quit your day job -- yet.
Start small. Grow a few hundred feet of a crop
you’re familiar with and know where you’re going to
sell it. Too many beginning farmers we know enthusiastically start
out to make it in farming only to blow their life’s savings
and become bitter and defeated.
That’s why this column will focus first and foremost on nuts
and bolts:
- What to grow. (And what not to grow.)
- How to sell it, even before you grow it.
- Essential equipment.
- Where to locate your farm.
- How to obtain land.
- How to get started -- debt-free -- using other people’s
money.
- How to equip your small farm for what many suburbanites spend
on a riding lawn mower.
- How to build a low-cost greenhouse that returns thousands of
dollars in a single season.
- How to be a price-setter, not a price-taker.
- How to eliminate middlemen and put the whole food dollar in
your pocket.
- How to get your customers to work for you.
- How they did it -- case histories of successful farmers, every
one of which was a beginner, once upon a time.
The list goes on. If we’re missing something that’s
vital to you, let us know. We’ll do our best to track it down.
Just keep in mind that the words “farm,” “farmer”
and “farming” mean different things to different people
in different places at different times. One size does not fit all.
USDA defines a farm as any place capable of producing $1,000 worth
of products in one year. That takes in a lot of territory. Our 14-
by 96-foot unheated hoophouse earns more than twice that -- on one-thirty-eighth
of an acre.
So, going by the federal government’s definition, a “farm”
can be as small as a sliver of your backyard. In our area of southeastern
Pennsylvania, it would take at least eight acres of average field
corn and soybeans to earn the same as our tiny hoophouse.
As a beginner, your farming canvas is bare. That can be a true
blessing, especially with the right information.
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