Tag: farmers

  • DHARMAPURI | Farmers show interest in Low-cost Agricultural Tools made by North Indians | Thanthi TV

    DHARMAPURI | Farmers show interest in Low-cost Agricultural Tools made by North Indians | Thanthi TV



    DHARMAPURI | Farmers show interest in Low-cost Agricultural Tools made by North Indians | Thanthi TV

    Catch us LIVE @http://www.thanthitv.com/
    Follow us on – Facebook @https://www.facebook.com/ThanthiTV
    Follow us on – Twitter @https://twitter.com/thanthitv

  • Blockchain: Technology for our future food system?

    Blockchain: Technology for our future food system?

    Editor’s note: This is a summary of the article “Grocers Embrace Blockchain in New Era of Transparency,” authored by Jenny McTaggart, contributing editor at Progressive Grocer, published Feb. 16, 2018. Read it here.

    Why is the food ecosystem so interested in blockchain?

    Trust through transparency, according to a special feature penned by Jenny McTaggart in the Feb. 2018 issue of Progressive Grocer. By its very structure [blockchain] “ensures a ‘single truth,’ as data that’s entered on the ledger can’t be manipulated.”

    In today’s marketplace, the promise of less manipulation and more transparency carries huge appeal. But there are other reasons, too, why blockchain is attractive to the food community — like the cost savings and benefits associated with food safety and traceability. McTaggart explains why blockchain may be an exciting technology for solving some of the food industry’s issues.

    You can read the full article here.

    Take a look and let us know your thoughts. Is blockchain the wave of the future for the food industry, or a fad you expect to come and go?


    Blockchain: Technology for our future food system? was originally published in The Dirt on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

  • Air farm – Drones evolving into smart farming tools

    Air farm – Drones evolving into smart farming tools



    The ingenious autonomous drones and the surprising new technologies that will help traditional farmers’ productivity soar.

    View the full series athttp://lombardodier.ft.com/

  • 8 mistakes that can put someone off buying your farm

    8 mistakes that can put someone off buying your farm

    A red For Sale sign with land behind© ING Image

    Farmers who are selling up can’t do anything to alter their geographical location, average land values or the political climate of agriculture.  But they can pave the way to a smoother sale by avoiding common mistakes that put prospective buyers off. We ask eight agents what the common errors are. 1. Not formalising agreements Chris Templar, associate at Bletsoes in Stratford-upon-Avon, says that failing to formalise agreements with anyone who rents land can be a big own goal. Time and again, deals […]

    This article is for subscribers.
    To continue reading subscribe today…

    Farmers Weekly Subscribe to Farmers Weekly

    Subscribe and get access to the information that helps you:

    • Stay compliant
    • Buy and sell wisely
    • Improve productivity
    • Reduce costs

    http://www.fwi.co.uk/business/8-mistakes-that-can-put-someone-off-buying-your-farm.htm

    On – 17 Mar, 2017 By ben pike

  • 8 mistakes that can put someone off buying your farm

    8 mistakes that can put someone off buying your farm

    A red For Sale sign with land behind© ING Image

    Farmers who are selling up can’t do anything to alter their geographical location, average land values or the political climate of agriculture.  But they can pave the way to a smoother sale by avoiding common mistakes that put prospective buyers off. We ask eight agents what the common errors are. 1. Not formalising agreements Chris Templar, associate at Bletsoes in Stratford-upon-Avon, says that failing to formalise agreements with anyone who rents land can be a big own goal. Time and again, deals […]

    This article is for subscribers.
    To continue reading subscribe today…

    Farmers Weekly Subscribe to Farmers Weekly

    Subscribe and get access to the information that helps you:

    • Stay compliant
    • Buy and sell wisely
    • Improve productivity
    • Reduce costs

    http://www.fwi.co.uk/business/8-mistakes-that-can-put-someone-off-buying-your-farm.htm

    On – 17 Mar, 2017 By ben pike

  • Growing Shiitake Mushrooms

    Growing Shiitake Mushrooms

    We got involved with Shiitake Mushrooms through our Agricultural Cooperative Extension Agency. (This is a great resource for any farmer. Make it a point at least to visit your local office and see the different programs they have going on for the farmer.) Back in 2003, our local office started helping traditional tobacco farmers transition into some other type of crop. They proposed growing both edible and medicinal Mushrooms.

     

    By growing both, a farmer has two ways to sell mushrooms. You can grow edible mushrooms and sell to farmers markets, restaurants and health food stores. With medicinal mushrooms, you can pursue the herbal stores and sometimes you can reach out to acupuncturists’ offices. A diversified farm would do both!

    Dr. Omoanghe Isikhuemhen of North Carolina A&T State University led the program. They proposed this deal: the school would provide the enough organic mushroom spore to inoculate 25 logs (3-4 ft. long x 4-8 in. diameter) in exchange for data collected by the farmer on how well the mushrooms produced. The farmer had to agree to keep approximately 200-250 logs for research.

    The farmer would be given bags of spore with batch numbers only. When giving their data information, the farmer would refer to the batch number. This was, and is ongoing, research to see which strains of shiitake do best in which areas of North Carolina.

    Alan and I signed up right away. That is how The Mushroom Hut @ Fox Farms was born! This was our first experience of Non-Traditional Forest Products (NTFP).

    We always stress, when starting out on a new venture, to start out small and don’t invest a lot into the project until you see it will work for you. Everything sounds good on paper!

    After signing up for the program, we were shown how to inoculate our log and how to care for it while waiting for the harvest—and that would be a very long wait. It can take from 6-12 months for the first fruiting after inoculation (most often 12 months).

    Now we’ll show you how to get started.

    Equipment And Supplies

    • Drill
    • Drill bit
    • Food-Grade Wax
    • Brush/Dauber (to apply the melted wax)
    • Spawn
    • Logs
    • Containers for soaking

    You can order most of these supplies from major mushroom spawn and equipment suppliers (examples: Field and Forest, Fungi Perfecti).

    Assuming you already have a drill, total cost for all these supplies will be around $100.

    Then, you have to scare up a log. If you have trees on your property, you can cut your own as a last resort. You may contact local loggers regarding logs that are too small for lumber—sometimes they’re sold for firewood. Or you can go into the woods and find a candidate that’s already on the ground.

    Location For Your Log Yard

    Find an area suitable for the production of the Shiitake. An area that is naturally shaded by trees is an ideal area for your log yard. If you are going to force fruiting, you will need access to water so this will be a consideration when deciding where to put your logs.

     

    Best Trees For Mushroom Cultivation

    Red and White Oaks and Sweetgums are the best trees for mushroom cultivation. These trees will produce longer than other trees due to their high wood density and strong bark.

    Here at the farm we have also used Maple, Beech, Ash, Cherry and Birch. Ash takes longer to produce fruit. The others are good producers, but the bark doesn’t hold up long. Experiment to see what works for you and keep records (a regular calendar is great to write your notes on.) Make sure your tree’s bark is in good condition before you decide to use it.

    When To Cut Down Trees For Mushroom Cultivation

    The trees should be cut in late fall to late winter (Early Spring only if sap is not up). Be careful not to scuff up the bark. Ragged bark can allow other fungi to invade the bark.

    Also, this will allow moisture loss and could slow down fruiting or keep it from fruiting at all.

    The Proper Size Of Logs For Mushroom Cultivation

    Use logs 3-4 ft. long and 3-8 in. in diameter. Keep in mind you will be moving the logs around. After cutting the logs, if you are not going to use them for a few weeks, make sure they don’t dry out.

    Keep them out of direct sunlight, watered if it is unusually dry, or loosely covered if it is too rainy. Make sure there is air circulation.

    When To Inoculate

     

    Here in Western North Carolina, we start in March and complete by late April. Contact your local agricultural extension office for suggestions about timing in your area.

    Ideally, you’ll use the trees as soon as possible after cutting. Production will be much better if moisture content is high. If you order your spawn before you are ready to use it, you can store it in the bottom of your refrigerator.

    The Inoculation Process

     

    Set up a work station for each task:

    1. Find a location that will be suitable for an electric drill (if you’re in a remote area make sure you have extra batteries).
    2. Space the holes 6-8 in. apart in rows along the length with 2-4 in. between rows. The holes should be placed in a staggered diamond pattern. (Closer spacings increase the rate of colonization and more rapid production but the spawn won’t go as far). Use your own judgement.
    3. Using your thumb inoculator, punch it down into the bag of spawn until the inoculator is full then, put it over the hole in the log and using your thumb press a couple of times to release the spawn into the hole. Make sure the drilled hole is completely full of the spawn.
    4. Now comes the waxing. You can have the wax slowly melting (on low) while you are doing steps one and two—a slow cooker on low will work. Make sure the wax never gets too hot. Use a natural bristle brush or wax dauber to apply the wax completely covering the spawn/hole. air bubbles. Go over it a couple of times if you need to.

    Stacking Your Logs

    After you have finished inoculating your logs it is time to stack your logs and wait for fruiting. Fruiting time can be anywhere from 6-12 months from time of inoculation. There are three methods of stacking:

    • Low stack: this method is simple. All it involves is leaving your logs on the ground. However, it’s best to lay the logs on top of a pallet or cinderblocks to keep ground fungi from invading the logs.
    • Crib style: stacking logs on top of each other, with horizontal layers of logs laid perpendicular to each other.
    • Lean-to: lean logs up against a fencing, rail or wire.

    During this time, make sure the bark/logs do not dry out. If it is unusually dry, you can use an overhead sprinkling system, watering hose, or soak the logs in a container. If soaking in a container, soak between 24-78 hours. This can also  be done to force fruiting.

    Know your water source! Do not use water from a creek, branch or river that has horses upstream of your mushrooms. E-coli has been found in water from this type of source. Test or filter your water to make sure it is reasonably clean.

    Harvesting Your Mushroom Logs

    Logs can fruit anywhere from 6-12 months from inoculation, due to reasons like the moisture content in logs, strain of mushroom, air temp, humidity, rainfall and light.

    When you see the logs begin to fruit, you can help the fruiting by watering or soaking. It can take about three days for the mushroom to be large enough for harvest. Look under the cap of the mushroom for bugs/snails and brush off with a brush, baster, or plain paper towel.

    Collect the mushrooms in box, basket, or stainless steel container. Store them in refrigerator or cool area immediately to preserve their freshness.

    Treating The Logs After Harvest

    Put the logs in a designated area where you will know these logs have fruited. Keep notes on a calendar as to when you have a fruiting so you can keep up with forcing of these logs.

    Only force logs every 6-10 weeks. If these logs have not started to fruit again, you can put them in containers to soak and force another fruiting. After soaking, you can shock the log with a rubber mallet. To do this, just strike the ends of the logs several times. This helps to stimulate the mycelium.

    Preventing Pests And Insects

    Try to keep leaves raked away from your log stacks. This is a good hiding place for snails and other bugs that love to eat on the mushroom.

    You can put out snail baits (saucers of beer) for the snails to drown in. Otherwise you have to pick most of the other bugs off the mushrooms as being picked. There are beetles that like to eat into the wax/spawn. Squirrels may be a problem in some places.

    Whatever your reason for growing shiitakes—food, fun or profit—here’s hoping your fungi fantasies are fulfilled!

    Susan Tipton-Fox, along with husband Alan Fox, continues the farming and preserving practices passed down to her by her family. She runs on-farm workshops and overnights in Yancey County, North Carolina. Follow her on Facebook: The Mushroom Hut @ Fox Farms.

    https://www.niftyhomestead.com/blog/growing-shiitake-mushrooms/

    On – 13 Jun, 2017 By Nifty Homestead Community Submission

  • How To Decolonize The Permaculture Movement

    How To Decolonize The Permaculture Movement

    About a year ago, I posted an article in the Huffington Post detailing some of the reasons why I thought permaculture had become a “gringo” movement irrelevant to the majority of small farmers around the world.

    There were a number of reactions, both positive and negative, but I was frustrated that very few people actually offered some sort of solution or proposal for how to “un-gringo” a movement and ideology that we find hope in.

    After a good deal of reflection, I want to focus now on how to rescue the permaculture movement; how to save it from some of its most disturbing and troubling tendencies. I believe that permaculture does have a lot to offer to peasant and agrarian communities around the world, so I humbly offer these ideas and suggestions not as a judgement; but rather in the hopes that permaculture can become relevant and practically applicable to the majority of small farmers around the world.

    Stop Buying Land in Shangri-La Areas Around the World

    We need to understand the effects of our privilege. As a foreigner (most likely white and male, because that is the predominant demographic of the permaculture movement) we are inevitably going to change the dynamics of small, rural communities where we take up residence.

    While there can be positive effects through bringing new knowledge and ideas into a community, there can (and often are) unseen and ignored negative effects. When wealthy foreigners buy up land in rural, agrarian areas, this inevitably leads to gentrification. The spike in land prices forces young people off of the land and causes migration.

    I don´t excuse myself from this reality. As a white, North American male, my family and I bought a farm in the mountains of El Salvador that was the inheritance of a young man who was no longer interested in farming. With the money we paid him, he paid a human trafficker to try and make it to the United States and has failed twice. If he tries to go again, he´ll have to deal with a ridiculous wall, increased border militarization, and a racist president.

    My only excuse is that I fell in love with a Salvadoran woman who invited me to be a part of her reality. If you do end up purchasing land in some hidden, agrarian community, make an effort to truly belong there. If you´re just buying a piece of land to have it as a vacation home and a place to host a couple permaculture workshops during the year, you´re probably causing much more harm than good.

    Also, if you are interested in permaculture and are looking for land to create a vision of your own, why not look at land in rural Kentucky instead of Costa Rica? Not only is land in many rural areas of the U.S. cheaper, but there is also an urgent need to repopulate rural areas and increase the “eyes-to-acre” ratio that is necessary for proper land management and ecological care.

    Don’t Make Permaculture Courses Your Primary Source of Income

    I understand that a number of people in the developed world have the extra income to spend on a $2,000-dollar permaculture course. If they’ve got the money, why shouldn´t they pay?

    The problem is that if you derive the majority of your income from offering permaculture courses, you´re automatically divorcing yourself from the reality of your neighbors who make their living from the land. You can´t claim to offer a viable economic alternative (no matter how ecological it may be) to your under privileged neighbors who see that your income comes from hosting wealthy North Americans.

    What if we were to use that money to re-distribute economic opportunities to our neighbors? We need to be honest and admit that establishing an economically viable permaculture system takes time and money. I´m not saying that we should stop offering courses all together, but rather reconsider how to invest that money into the dreams and visions of neighbor farmers who don’t have the same economic potential as do we.

    After all, isn´t that what the third ethic of permaculture is all about: redistributing surplus so that others can enjoy the long-term abundance that comes from ecological design?

    Stop Appropriating Knowledge

    There is nothing that angers me more than watching permaculture videos on YouTube where some permaculture expert claims to have “developed” or “invented” some revolutionary technique to help preserve soil, store water, or save the environment.

    For example, recently I watched a video of a permaculture farmer who claims to have developed a technique to slow erosion through making banana leaf boomerang barriers on the slope beneath where he planted some fruit trees. The idea is no doubt a good one; but it´s far from a unique development. I personally have seen dozens of small farmers throughout Central America do the exact same thing. Of course, they don’t have access to a camera and the internet to show the world their invention.

    To put it bluntly, this is appropriation of knowledge, and it´s the same thing that mega- pharmaceutical companies and agricultural corporations have been doing for years through the patenting of medicines and seeds that have been stolen from the shared ecological wisdom of indigenous and peasant cultures throughout the world.

    Be humble, and recognize that while permaculture may very well have a number of unique skills to offer, many of these skills and techniques have been around for hundreds of years.

    Stop Demonizing Small Peasants

    There are a number of very serious problems with how many small farmers in Central America and other parts of the world farm their lands. The effects of the Green Revolution on small farmers around the world have led to an almost complete loss of traditional farming knowledge in some rural communities

    The excessive use of pesticides and herbicides, burning crop residues, tilling hillsides, and other examples of ecologically damaging farming practices are obviously unsustainable, unhealthy, and damaging to the environment. The solution, however, is not to criticize these farmers, but rather to humbly seek to understand their situation.

    If you had an acre of land and 6 children to feed, would you prioritize permaculture farming solutions that might offer abundance a decade from now or would you continue to follow the well-trodden path that while unsustainable, does offer subsistence and income?

    Instead of criticizing small farmers who adopt unsustainable farming practices, it would be much more valuable to look at the sociological and systemic factors that lead to this adoption. Permaculture has not had much of a voice for advocacy, but it would be heartening to see permaculture “experts” around the world offer their voices to fight against unfair distribution of land instead of simply blaming small farmers for their “ignorance.”

    Start Farming Grains

    I understand that annual grain farming does come with a number of difficulties. The annual tillage of the land and the monocultures of one crop obviously present an ecological challenge. But you know what, agrarian communities around the world subsist on the farming of annual grains and that is not going to change. Even if you stoutly believe in developing a “food forest” or “stacked polycultures” of tree and perennial crops, dedicate at least a portion of your land to developing more ecological solutions for annual grain crops.

    It takes years for a perennial food system to develop enough to offer any sort of subsistence or income, and almost no small farmer around the world has enough savings or alternative sources of income to wait around for their system to develop into the marvelous and awe-inspiring productive systems that you see on a 20-year-old permaculture farm

    I´m not saying that we should throw out the idea of food forests or perennial crops, but avoid the tendency to offer those systems as the “only” way to grow food in an ecological and sustainable manner. When you show off your acres and acres of food forest to a small farmer in Central America, chances are that he or she might find it interesting but have little incentive to try and reproduce what you have created.

    If, however, you had a diversified landscape with an acre of food forest, an acre of pasture, and an acre of annual crops, there is a far better chance that your neighbors will find interest in what you´re developing.

    Despite the challenges, it is possible to grow grains in a sustainable, ecological fashion. Susana Lein of Salamander Springs Farm in rural Kentucky lived and worked in Guatemala for close to a decade. When she moved to her own farm in Kentucky, she started a no-till Fukuoka method of annual grain production that was adapted to the traditional corn and bean diet of Central American farmers. If she can do that in Kentucky, why aren´t more permaculturists doing the same in Central America, or experimenting with no-till rice harvests in Asia.

    Be Aware of Alternative Epistemologies

    The bread and butter of the permaculture movement is the PDC, or permaculture design course. The two-week curriculum has been offered by thousands of teachers in every part of the world and has been adapted to the specific and particular contexts of small farmers everywhere.

    Many of the folks who critiqued my first article argued that they offered free PDC´s to their neighbor farmers. While I find that commendable, I think it´s also important to recognize that many rural, peasant and indigenous communities don’t learn the same us westerners do.

    The pedagogy of a course with Power Point presentations, lectures and “visits” to the field might actually be so foreign to a small Guatemalan farmer that he or she might get nothing out of it. The Brazilian professor Boaventura Sousa Santos talks of the idea of epistemicide, the elimination of alternative forms of knowing through the colonization that comes through western academia and forms of learning.

    An NGO that I worked with in Guatemala found that the best way to “teach” small Guatemalan farmers had nothing to do with courses, workshops, agricultural schools, or the like. Rather, they simply brought small farmers from neighboring communities together to tour the farms and lands that each one worked.

    While one corn field may appear just like every other corn field to the untrained eye, these visits allowed for small farmers to learn of small variations in growing techniques, in seed saving, in the combination of companion plants, in soil preservation that many “experts” might never have noticed. At the same time, it allowed for small farmers to take pride in what they were doing which is so often criticized or ignored

    Perhaps the famous PDC needs to be laid to rest and other, more appropriate pedagogies developed if permaculture is going to find relevance with small farmers around the world

    Conclusion

    I truly hope that this article doesn’t come across as a futile and derisive attack on permaculture practitioners around the world. I do honestly believe (and hope) that permaculture has a lot to offer the world. We need to recognize, however, that what´s most important isn´t the content or subject in itself, but rather how it is presented with respect for the local autonomy of the placed agrarian communities around the world.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tobias-roberts/how-to-decolonize-the-per_b_14501784.html

    On – 31 Jan, 2017 By Tobias Roberts

  • Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

     

    Opinion

     

    Talking Point: New index will take the guesswork out of buying farm businesses

    JAN DAVIS, Mercury

    WE’VE been hearing a lot lately about growing interest in Australian farm land. The proof of the pudding is always in the eating – and the fact that many wallets have been opening demonstrates that buyers are recognising the value inherent in well-performing agribusinesses.

    Management consulting company BDO has been looking at the key investor groups which have a particular focus on Australia’s food and agribusiness industry. They’ve identified that there are several different groups in the market – all with slightly different motivators.

    Trade buyers always have an eye for a strategic purchase. Australian farmers have been buying out their neighbours to create larger-scale enterprises. Indeed, over the 30-year period to 2011, there was a 40 per cent decline in the number of Australian farm businesses, while area farmed actually increased.

    Institutional investors, such as super funds, have been slow to recognise the value in agribusiness. However, in the current investment environment, the returns offered by agriculture are increasingly compelling. This is particularly so when taking into account the key drivers of food security, the growing middle class in Asia and changing diets.

    High net-worth individuals are also buying the agricultural investment story – literally! Cases in point include London billionaire Joe Lewis taking control of AACo, and Gina Rinehart’s bid for Kidman.

    And then there’s the Asian buyers, whose interest in Australian agriculture is primarily motivated by strong commercial fundamentals and opportunities for growth.

    Until recently, investors across all these sectors have had to rely on patchy information and their own research to determine value when considering purchase of agribusinesses. With farms, a key guide has been the underpinning land value. As we saw last week, that has delivered solid returns over many years.

    But how can a potential investor assess the worth of a business beyond land value?

    One of the factors that has limited wider investors interest has been the difficulty in getting access to reliable, timely and relevant information on how the sector performs on basic business measures; and how performance compares to other possible investments.

    Well, that’s all about to change.

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

    For the first time in the history of Australian agriculture, investors will have available a regularly updated Index which provides a measure of the investment returns being generated by the sector. This will enable investors to compare the sector’s performance against that of other asset classes.

    The Index is based on the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) index which has been available for North American agricultural investors since 1990. From a starting base of US$350 million, the NCREIF index now reports US$7.8 billion from 729 properties. It also provides the Timberland index which reports on assets valued at US$24.2 billion.

    The index will use the same basic methodology as that used for the US, but with some small tweaks to reflect differences in the Australian agriculture sector.

    In the initial stages, it will be based on a portfolio of corporate farms that together total more than A$827 million in total asset value. The quarterly performance of these businesses is then aggregated into a single index. Of course, there are strict rules around participation in order to preserve the confidentiality of those participating.

    The baseline index has been calculated for the financial year ending 30 June 2016. It shows an impressive average return of 23.9 per cent across the portfolio. This figure was made up of an 8.3 per cent increase in income; and 14.6 per cent from capital appreciation.

    Over time, the number of participants is expected to increase. This will enable provision of more detail across different locations. It may also provide other data, for example the returns from buying and leasing farms to Australian farmers to manage as compared with returns achieved by investors who choose to manage their own properties.

    In launching the Index, the Executive Director of the Australian Farm Institute, Mick Keogh, said that the institute is supportive of the Index “as it will provide and indicator of the performance of the Australian agricultural sector on a regular basis, and will help and encourage investors to include the sector as an important component of a balanced investment portfolio.”

    This is an important development for the agribusiness sector. The more information business owners and investors have, the better positioned they are to be drive increased efficiencies and be competitive in an increasingly benchmark global market place.

    http://www.themercury.com.au/news/opinion/talking-point-new-index-will-take-the-guesswork-out-of-buying-farm-businesses/news-story/9aae0aa5c18adeb5b325a9c4cd73cb6d

    On – 29 Nov, 2016 By JAN DAVIS

  • Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    Index takes guesswork out of buying a farm

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

     

    Opinion

     

    Talking Point: New index will take the guesswork out of buying farm businesses

    JAN DAVIS, Mercury

    WE’VE been hearing a lot lately about growing interest in Australian farm land. The proof of the pudding is always in the eating – and the fact that many wallets have been opening demonstrates that buyers are recognising the value inherent in well-performing agribusinesses.

    Management consulting company BDO has been looking at the key investor groups which have a particular focus on Australia’s food and agribusiness industry. They’ve identified that there are several different groups in the market – all with slightly different motivators.

    Trade buyers always have an eye for a strategic purchase. Australian farmers have been buying out their neighbours to create larger-scale enterprises. Indeed, over the 30-year period to 2011, there was a 40 per cent decline in the number of Australian farm businesses, while area farmed actually increased.

    Institutional investors, such as super funds, have been slow to recognise the value in agribusiness. However, in the current investment environment, the returns offered by agriculture are increasingly compelling. This is particularly so when taking into account the key drivers of food security, the growing middle class in Asia and changing diets.

    High net-worth individuals are also buying the agricultural investment story – literally! Cases in point include London billionaire Joe Lewis taking control of AACo, and Gina Rinehart’s bid for Kidman.

    And then there’s the Asian buyers, whose interest in Australian agriculture is primarily motivated by strong commercial fundamentals and opportunities for growth.

    Until recently, investors across all these sectors have had to rely on patchy information and their own research to determine value when considering purchase of agribusinesses. With farms, a key guide has been the underpinning land value. As we saw last week, that has delivered solid returns over many years.

    But how can a potential investor assess the worth of a business beyond land value?

    One of the factors that has limited wider investors interest has been the difficulty in getting access to reliable, timely and relevant information on how the sector performs on basic business measures; and how performance compares to other possible investments.

    Well, that’s all about to change.

    The Australian Farmland Property Index was launched recently at the Australian Farm Institute Roundtable Conference.

    For the first time in the history of Australian agriculture, investors will have available a regularly updated Index which provides a measure of the investment returns being generated by the sector. This will enable investors to compare the sector’s performance against that of other asset classes.

    The Index is based on the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) index which has been available for North American agricultural investors since 1990. From a starting base of US$350 million, the NCREIF index now reports US$7.8 billion from 729 properties. It also provides the Timberland index which reports on assets valued at US$24.2 billion.

    The index will use the same basic methodology as that used for the US, but with some small tweaks to reflect differences in the Australian agriculture sector.

    In the initial stages, it will be based on a portfolio of corporate farms that together total more than A$827 million in total asset value. The quarterly performance of these businesses is then aggregated into a single index. Of course, there are strict rules around participation in order to preserve the confidentiality of those participating.

    The baseline index has been calculated for the financial year ending 30 June 2016. It shows an impressive average return of 23.9 per cent across the portfolio. This figure was made up of an 8.3 per cent increase in income; and 14.6 per cent from capital appreciation.

    Over time, the number of participants is expected to increase. This will enable provision of more detail across different locations. It may also provide other data, for example the returns from buying and leasing farms to Australian farmers to manage as compared with returns achieved by investors who choose to manage their own properties.

    In launching the Index, the Executive Director of the Australian Farm Institute, Mick Keogh, said that the institute is supportive of the Index “as it will provide and indicator of the performance of the Australian agricultural sector on a regular basis, and will help and encourage investors to include the sector as an important component of a balanced investment portfolio.”

    This is an important development for the agribusiness sector. The more information business owners and investors have, the better positioned they are to be drive increased efficiencies and be competitive in an increasingly benchmark global market place.

    http://www.themercury.com.au/news/opinion/talking-point-new-index-will-take-the-guesswork-out-of-buying-farm-businesses/news-story/9aae0aa5c18adeb5b325a9c4cd73cb6d

    On – 29 Nov, 2016 By JAN DAVIS

  • Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Numbers are hard to get hold of, but anecdotally more tenants are seeking advice and finance to purchase farms and land. While no figures are collected centrally, the Tenant Farmers Association’s recommended professionals are recording more activity on surrenders and purchases than usual, says chief executive George Dunn. The AMC has also experienced a rise in enquiries for loans by tenants looking to buy their holdings. Regional agricultural manager for North Wales and the Midlands Andrew Connah has seen such […]

    This article is for subscribers.
    To continue reading subscribe today…

    Farmers Weekly Subscribe to Farmers Weekly

    http://www.fwi.co.uk/business/practical-advice-tenants-buying-farms.htm

    On – 18 Feb, 2017 By suzie horne

  • Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Practical advice for tenants buying their farms

    Numbers are hard to get hold of, but anecdotally more tenants are seeking advice and finance to purchase farms and land. While no figures are collected centrally, the Tenant Farmers Association’s recommended professionals are recording more activity on surrenders and purchases than usual, says chief executive George Dunn. The AMC has also experienced a rise in enquiries for loans by tenants looking to buy their holdings. Regional agricultural manager for North Wales and the Midlands Andrew Connah has seen such […]

    This article is for subscribers.
    To continue reading subscribe today…

    Farmers Weekly Subscribe to Farmers Weekly

    http://www.fwi.co.uk/business/practical-advice-tenants-buying-farms.htm

    On – 18 Feb, 2017 By suzie horne

  • How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    by Bella Scotton
    The Hobby Farm Success in Today’s Modern World

    There are a lot of reasons why a family may decide that a hobby farm would be the best place to live. One of these reasons is because it is perceived as a way of being able to save money. Yet, what often happens is that the hobby farm purchased for the good of the family turns out to be quite a money maker. Generally a farm is classed as a hobby farm if it’s comprised of less than 50 acres.

    What Could 20 Acres Do For You?

    If you were to ask this question of the young Johnson family you may find the answer to be quite surprising. This is a couple that had always found a way to do some hobby farming no matter where they lived, basically following the same concept of saving some money by growing and raising your own food. They soon grew tired of this and decided to turn 20 acres of land into something that was going to produce some money for them. What is impressive about this story is that they raise beef, pork and poultry all on pasture. They have adopted the modern day version of farming which allows them to use these 20 acres without the need for massive barns and tons of equipment.

    80 People Provided With 40 Vegetable Varieties From 9/10 Of An Acre Of Land

    Imagine being able to grow a vast number of veggies to feed 80 people on this amount of land! Bethanee Wright does exactly this at  Winterfell Acres in Blanchardville in south central Wisconsin. She is now ready to branch out to a little bigger operation but has no intentions of going into large scale farming, nor does she need to. With what she has accomplished on this small plot of land imagine what she is going to do with a few acres.

    hobby farm2

    What are the Payoffs?

    While in both these cases none of the parties indicate that they are going to get rich from this type of hobby farming, but they do seem to be making a decent living, while at the same time they are saving money by growing their own food. Then there is also the long term investment in the small amount of property that they do own.

    For the Johnson family their hobby farm is located in Centuria, in the St. Croix River Valley. There still seems to be plenty of open farm land for sale that is the ideal size for a hobby farm. One example, is approx. 28 acres going for $281,900. and this is without a residence being on it as yet. With the history that real estate has it is easy to imagine what the value of property like this will be in as little as five years time. The Johnson’s are renting their land from family members who have an orchard across the street.

    Can 1.5 Acres Really Generate $140,000 a Year?

    This success story originates from Canada, but the concept and principals can easily be applied to any hobby farm in the United States. This is a story about a couple who have been able to net $140,000. a year on their 1.5 acre farm. Their methods have been so successful that they have actually written a book about it. What it all comes down to the right techniques for tilling, permanent beds and crop rotation with the use of a few yet simple tools.

    hobby farm3

    Using the Hobby Farm as a Stepping Stone

    It is not uncommon for many who start out in hobby farming to develop such a passion for it that they want to move onto a bigger farming operation, and many are successful at doing this. A prime example of this is the Godfrey family. They did their homework first when they started with their hobby farming by learning from the Amish. Who without a doubt are first class farmers. The Godfrey’s journey started with a 40 acre hobby farm. Initially their farming activity was more focused on sustaining their needs where they had some horses and a small dairy, and grew their own produce and raised some live stock as well as they had an orchard.

    When they were ready to step up to a larger farming operation they were able to sell their forty acre farm in Cameron Texas for a substantial profit in 2007 with which they used their profits from the sale to purchase a 169 acre farm.

    These are just a few of the many success stories with tons more that stretch right across the US. All of these successes have just focused on the financial aspects of hobby farming and have not even touched on the physical and mental successes that this type of land purchase can bring to every member of the family.
    Like this article?  Please feel free to share or post a link on your site: https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    On – 19 Jul, 2017 By

  • How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    How Could Buying a Hobby Farm Change Your Future?

    by Bella Scotton
    The Hobby Farm Success in Today’s Modern World

    There are a lot of reasons why a family may decide that a hobby farm would be the best place to live. One of these reasons is because it is perceived as a way of being able to save money. Yet, what often happens is that the hobby farm purchased for the good of the family turns out to be quite a money maker. Generally a farm is classed as a hobby farm if it’s comprised of less than 50 acres.

    What Could 20 Acres Do For You?

    If you were to ask this question of the young Johnson family you may find the answer to be quite surprising. This is a couple that had always found a way to do some hobby farming no matter where they lived, basically following the same concept of saving some money by growing and raising your own food. They soon grew tired of this and decided to turn 20 acres of land into something that was going to produce some money for them. What is impressive about this story is that they raise beef, pork and poultry all on pasture. They have adopted the modern day version of farming which allows them to use these 20 acres without the need for massive barns and tons of equipment.

    80 People Provided With 40 Vegetable Varieties From 9/10 Of An Acre Of Land

    Imagine being able to grow a vast number of veggies to feed 80 people on this amount of land! Bethanee Wright does exactly this at  Winterfell Acres in Blanchardville in south central Wisconsin. She is now ready to branch out to a little bigger operation but has no intentions of going into large scale farming, nor does she need to. With what she has accomplished on this small plot of land imagine what she is going to do with a few acres.

    hobby farm2

    What are the Payoffs?

    While in both these cases none of the parties indicate that they are going to get rich from this type of hobby farming, but they do seem to be making a decent living, while at the same time they are saving money by growing their own food. Then there is also the long term investment in the small amount of property that they do own.

    For the Johnson family their hobby farm is located in Centuria, in the St. Croix River Valley. There still seems to be plenty of open farm land for sale that is the ideal size for a hobby farm. One example, is approx. 28 acres going for $281,900. and this is without a residence being on it as yet. With the history that real estate has it is easy to imagine what the value of property like this will be in as little as five years time. The Johnson’s are renting their land from family members who have an orchard across the street.

    Can 1.5 Acres Really Generate $140,000 a Year?

    This success story originates from Canada, but the concept and principals can easily be applied to any hobby farm in the United States. This is a story about a couple who have been able to net $140,000. a year on their 1.5 acre farm. Their methods have been so successful that they have actually written a book about it. What it all comes down to the right techniques for tilling, permanent beds and crop rotation with the use of a few yet simple tools.

    hobby farm3

    Using the Hobby Farm as a Stepping Stone

    It is not uncommon for many who start out in hobby farming to develop such a passion for it that they want to move onto a bigger farming operation, and many are successful at doing this. A prime example of this is the Godfrey family. They did their homework first when they started with their hobby farming by learning from the Amish. Who without a doubt are first class farmers. The Godfrey’s journey started with a 40 acre hobby farm. Initially their farming activity was more focused on sustaining their needs where they had some horses and a small dairy, and grew their own produce and raised some live stock as well as they had an orchard.

    When they were ready to step up to a larger farming operation they were able to sell their forty acre farm in Cameron Texas for a substantial profit in 2007 with which they used their profits from the sale to purchase a 169 acre farm.

    These are just a few of the many success stories with tons more that stretch right across the US. All of these successes have just focused on the financial aspects of hobby farming and have not even touched on the physical and mental successes that this type of land purchase can bring to every member of the family.
    Like this article?  Please feel free to share or post a link on your site: https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    https://www.landhub.com/blog/buying-hobby-farm-change-future/

    On – 19 Jul, 2017 By

Malcare WordPress Security