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High in protein and low
in saturated fat, amaranth is earning space on health-food store
shelves.
- Photo by Rob Myers |
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Diverse crops bring diverse benefits
Farmers and agricultural scientists have known for years that crop
rotations can break insect and disease cycles, reduce weeds, curb
erosion, supplement soil nutrients, improve soil structure and conserve
soil moisture.
Diversification can also:
soften
impacts on environmental resources
spread
farmers’ economic risk
exploit
profitable niche markets
create
new industries based on agriculture, strengthening rural communities
aid
the domestic economy, enabling producers to grow crops that would
otherwise be imported.
This bulletin will provide you with a jumping-off point to diversify your
farm, from choosing the right new crops to managing them successfully. While
some alternative crops command high prices, others pay dividends by building
natural resources or boosting the yields of rotational crops. And growing crops
that require processing, for example, can provide jobs in your community.
Diversify to enhance profits
Growing a diverse selection of crops can expand your markets and offset commodity
price swings. Consequently, profits won’t depend exclusively on any one
market, as they might, for example, when you only produce crops for livestock
feed.
Overall, the economic picture improves with strategic diversification. Gross
income for an alternative crop may be higher and production costs may drop.
For example, adding legumes to a rotation reduces the need to purchase nitrogen
fertilizer. Moreover, rotations that include three or more crops usually have
fewer problems with pests – and less need for pesticides.
Keep in mind that post-harvest handling and transportation to more distant
markets may increase costs. In addition, while specialty crops like fruits,
vegetables, ornamentals or nuts can dramatically increase income per acre, they
usually demand more intensive labor.
Diverse rotations also reduce economic risk associated with unfavorable weather
or pest damage in any one crop. Despite drought, for example, you can successfully
harvest such crops as amaranth, millet, safflower, sesame and sunflowers. In
central Missouri, diversified crop farmer Jerry Weber grows sunflowers because
they are able to use moisture present throughout the soil profile and yield
“reasonably well,” even when timely rains don’t come. By comparison,
sufficient moisture at pollination can make or break a corn crop.
“Growing different kinds of crops that have needs for moisture at slightly
different times is what tends to spread your risk,” Weber said. “Any
time you can spread that risk is an advantage, and that’s why we got involved
in diversifying crops.” Over the six years since Weber started growing
sunflowers, they have been as profitable or more profitable than any of his
other crops, such as corn, milo and soybeans.
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Flax is gaining in popularity among farmers,
especially in north central states, where farmers are looking for alternative crops for the cool season.
- Photo by Rob Myers |
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Even if the profit from a new crop is negligible – or negative –
you can still benefit economically from an expanded rotation. Labor and equipment
are distributed more smoothly through the year, thereby increasing operational
efficiency and decreasing payroll costs. Broader diversity also can raise the
yields of traditional crops. With its deep taproot, amaranth opens up compacted
soils for the roots of the subsequent crop. In one grower’s fields, growing
amaranth added a 5- to 10- bushel per-acre increase to the wheat crop that followed
it.
In Washington, diversification enables Kupers to match his crops to his variable
growing conditions as well as to a fluctuating marketplace. “There is
no recipe,” he said. “I know my work would be much simpler if there
were, but there are simply too many variables. I take into account the weed
and pest cycles, market conditions and moisture, and make decisions based on
all these things.”
As markets expand for diverse products, you may find more opportunities, although
you might need to overcome challenges like distribution bottlenecks.
New market supply chains offer farmers new opportunities to produce more value
and retain more of that value on the farm,” said Fred Kirschenmann, a
North Dakota organic grain grower. “An increasing number of customers
want a story with the food they buy, which provides opportunities to market
ecologically sound farming,” he said. “The market for sustainably
produced goods is there; what we need to do is develop the supply chains that
connect the farmer producing those foods to the customer.”
Achieve Environmental Benefits
Over the years, the U.S. agricultural landscape has lost some of its natural
features, from native trees along stream banks to fewer vegetative field borders.
Yet the complexity and diversity of an ecosystem are at the root of its health.
Ecosystems with greater diversity are usually more stable: they withstand
disturbances and can recover better than less diverse systems. The more diverse
the plants, animals and soil-borne organisms that inhabit a farming system,
the more diverse the populations of pest-fighting beneficial organisms a farm
can support. For example, healthy soils enriched and revitalized by rotation
and cover crops promote root development and water infiltration, thus are less
prone to disease.
In Big Sandy, Mont., Bob Quinn attributes his farm’s profitability to
its soil-building and pest-thwarting four- to five-year rotations. Its alfalfa,
clover and grain fields are thick with predacious lady beetles, and Quinn’s
last serious insect infestation was 15 years ago. Similarly, the viral diseases
and root rots that used to harm the farm’s grains are “mostly gone,”
Quinn said.
“Most people can’t believe it,” he added. “For many
years, people thought I was spraying at night.”
With no large livestock operations nearby to supply manure, the farm’s
primary soil improvement amendment is green manure. In high-moisture years,Quinn
sows weed-suppressing alfalfa. In intermediate-moisture years, Quinn and his
farming partner plant less-thirsty sweet clover with a companion grain, then
disk or plow it under the next season. In very dry years, they sow green-manure
peas in the fall or green-manure lentils in the spring, turning them under by
the first of June.
“The rotation and soil-building program we have in place allows a great
diversity in soil biology, and that’s what keeps the pests in place,”
Quinn said.
In west central Iowa, Ron and Maria Rosmann use primarily a six-year rotation:
corn, soybeans, corn, small grains and two years of alfalfa. They plant windbreaks,
grassy field borders and native prairie species for pheasants and quail. Generous
populations of lacewings and ladybugs indicate that the Rosmanns’ commitment
to biodiversity is keeping predators in balance with prey.
The Rosmanns have only used one insecticide – Bacillus thuringiensis
against corn borers – on their farm in the past 20 years.
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Buckwheat, a grain used
in noodles, multi-grain breads and cereals, among other products,
sells for three times the price of corn in the marketplace,
making it an attractive alternative crop.
– Photo by Rob Myers |
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Community Benefits
Communities can benefit from diversified farming ventures. Direct marketing
of alternative crops creates local opportunities to process, package or sell
new products. Cooperatives provide ways for farmers to jointly invest in processing
and marketing.
In the seven Mississippi Delta states, a SARE-funded project helped launch
the Delta Enterprise Network (www.deltanetwork.org), an evolving group of farmers,
entrepreneurs and others creating new business ventures, cooperatives and policy
changes. DEN members assist each other in overcoming barriers to sustainable
agricultural enterprises in their region, measuring their successes in sustainable,
locally owned, value-added enterprises. They cite recent achievements in fresh-water
shrimp, sweet potatoes, aromatic rice and organic soybeans.
DEN unites teams through statewide workshops and conferences. Transforming
people and catalyzing groups is one of its fundamental objectives. “Often,
people will try to start new ventures on their own,” said Jim Worstell,
DEN executive director. “We have this myth about the lone entrepreneur
establishing businesses, but very seldom does it work that way.”
Instead, Worstell said, “You have to have a team.”
Community innovation grants offered in SARE’s Southern Region link sustainable
agriculture to rural community development. For example, a Kentucky project
is increasing demand for high-value edamame soybeans through fairs, television
programs and personal appearances. The result was a spike in media coverage,
consumer demand and grower awareness.
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