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Grower improves fungicide use and compaction with helicopter

Farmers Weekly

Farmers Weekly A helicopter is not the standard piece of farm kit to be stored in a machinery shed, but Canadian grain producer Wade McAllister plans to combine his passion for farming and flying to enhance crop and soil health at the family farm in Alberta.

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Family Farmer Finds a Connection to Eaters Through Livestock

Food Tank

Now that he raises pigs, he can apply nutrient-rich solid manure to the familys grain fields, helping to build soil health further and reduce the use of synthetic fertilizersa benefit for both the environment and his wallet. Grain farming is very rewarding, but there’s basically zero contact with consumers, says Hutton.

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Control your farm transition

Western FarmPress

Family farms cant control Mother Nature, government whim or global grain competitors. We can plan for a smooth farm succession.

Farming 105
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The Financials of Profitable Small-Scale Farming

Modern Farmer

Given the challenges in an industry dominated by factory farms, such as slim profit margins and little control over pricing and markets, between 52 percent and 79 percent of small family farms are at high financial risk. We only have 45 acres, which is a really small farm around here,” says Larson.

Farming 122
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Op-Ed | A Missing Investment Strategy: Climate Resilience Hides in Local Food Markets

Food Tank

Remember that family farms continue to feed 70 percent of the worlds population. There is a strong market demand for local products from agroecological farms and producers, including green leafy vegetables, fruits, grains, small livestock, and native seeds. These markets are large and important to local producers.

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What Will Become of Rice?

Modern Farmer

In one of the greenhouses on the Lundberg Family Farms acreage in northern California, there sits a binder. Rice growing in one of the Lundberg Family Farms test greenhouses. Cross-breeding rice at Lundberg Family Farms. Isbell has, at one point, done the math down to the grain. “A Hence, the binder.

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Book Excerpt: Commodities and Consolidation

Food Tank

Instead of growing a variety of crops and raising animals, most farms now rely on a commodity crop or two. That’s why less than 10 percent of farms still have animals. Previously, it was cost-effective for farmers to graze their cattle or grow their own feed.