Why do farmers have to add fertiliser to their crops?
This maintains the soil fertility, so the farmer can continue to grow nutritious crops and healthy crops. Farmers turn to fertilizers because these substances contain plant nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium.
What is the goal of a seed farmer?
A seed farmer’s goal is to produce large yields of seed with a high germination rate. Spindly crops produce small quantities of weak, malformed seed, making crop health and vitality arguably even more important to seed farmers than it is to farmers producing crops for food.
Why do we need to support farmers markets?
Shopping and cooking from the farmers market helps you to reconnect with the cycles of nature in our region. As you look forward to asparagus in spring, savor sweet corn in summer, or bake pumpkins in autumn, you reconnect with the earth, the weather, and the turning of the year. 3. Support Family Farmers
Why do farmers use too much or too little fertilizer?
By testing their soil, farmers know which nutrients—and how much—to apply to the soil. If too little is added, crops will not produce as much as they should. If too much is added, or at the wrong time, excess nutrients will run off the fields and pollute streams and groundwater.
Why do farmers use one irrigation system over another?
The reasons why farmers use one system over another are varied and sometimes complex, and the type of system can impact crop yields as well as the water footprint of a given crop, regardless of how water efficient the system might be.
Why do farmers need to water their crops?
Many farmers cannot rely entirely on rainfall to water their crops because they grow in drier climates, experience unpredictable rainfall patters or want to increase their yields, among other reasons.
How does a farmer inject his cattle with hormones?
Instead of a liquid injection with a syringe, many farmers drive a steroid-loaded pellet or “implant” between the skin and cartilage of the back of the animal’s ear. The guns used to inject the pellets resemble a larger version of an ear-piercing gun for humans.
A seed farmer’s goal is to produce large yields of seed with a high germination rate. Spindly crops produce small quantities of weak, malformed seed, making crop health and vitality arguably even more important to seed farmers than it is to farmers producing crops for food.