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Farming Luring More Young People

Young People Farming

By DINESH RAMDE   12/21/11 03:27 AM ET   AP

MILWAUKEE -- A Wisconsin factory worker worried about layoffs became a dairy farmer. An employee at a Minnesota nonprofit found an escape from her cubicle by buying a vegetable farm. A nuclear engineer tired of office bureaucracy decided to get into cattle ranching in Texas.

While fresh demographic information on U.S. farmers won't be available until after the next agricultural census is done next year, there are signs more people in their 20s and 30s are going into farming: Enrollment in university agriculture programs has increased, as has interest in farmer-training programs.

Young people are turning up at farmers markets and are blogging, tweeting and promoting their agricultural endeavors through other social media.

The young entrepreneurs typically cite two reasons for going into farming: Many find the corporate world stifling and see no point in sticking it out when there's little job security; and demand for locally grown and organic foods has been strong enough that even in the downturn they feel confident they can sell their products.

Laura Frerichs, 31, of Hutchinson, Minn., discovered her passion for farming about a year after she graduated from college with an anthropology degree. She planned to work in economic development in Latin America and thought she ought to get some experience working on a farm.

She did stints on five farms, mostly vegetable farms, and fell in love with the work. Frerichs and her husband now have their own organic farm, and while she doesn't expect it to make them rich, she's confident they'll be able to earn a living.

"There's just this growing consciousness around locally grown foods, around organic foods," she said. "Where we are in the Twin Cities there's been great demand for that."

Farming is inherently risky: Drought, flooding, wind and other weather extremes can all destroy a year's work. And with farmland averaging $2,140 per acre across the U.S. but two to four times that much in the Midwest and California, the start-up costs can be daunting.

Still, agriculture fared better than many parts of the economy during the recession, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture predicts record profits for farmers as a whole this year.

"People are looking at farm income, especially the increase in asset values, and seeing a really positive story about our economy," said USDA senior economist Mary Clare Ahearn, citing preliminary statistics. "Young people are viewing agriculture as a great opportunity and saying they want to be a part of it."

That's welcome news to the government. More than 60 percent of farmers are over the age of 55, and without young farmers to replace them when they retire the nation's food supply would depend on fewer and fewer people.

"We'd be vulnerable to local economic disruptions, tariffs, attacks on the food supply, really, any disaster you can think of," said Poppy Davis, who coordinates the USDA's programs for beginning farmers and ranchers.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has called for 100,000 new farmers within the next few years, and Congress has responded with proposals that would provide young farmers with improved access to USDA support and loan programs.

One beginning farmer is Gabrielle Rojas, 34, from the central Wisconsin town of Hewitt. As a rebellious teen all she wanted to do was leave her family's farm and find a career that didn't involve cows. But she changed her mind after spending years in dead-end jobs in a factory and restaurant.

"In those jobs I'm just a number, just a time-clock number," Rojas said. "But now I'm doing what I love to do. If I'm having a rough day or I'm a little sad because the sun's not shining or my tractor's broken, I can always go out and be by the cattle. That always makes me feel better."

Rojas got help in changing careers from an apprenticeship program paid for by the USDA, which began giving money in 2009 to universities and nonprofit groups that help train beginning farmers. The grants helped train about 5,000 people the first year. This year, the USDA estimates more than twice as many benefited.

One of the groups that received a grant is Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service, or MOSES. The Spring Valley, Wis., chapter teaches farming entrepreneurs how to cope with price swings and what to do in cases of catastrophic weather.

MOSES also organizes field days, where would-be farmers tour the operations of successful farms to learn and share tips. Attendance is up 20 percent this year, director Faye Jones said, and some outings that used to attract 30 or 40 people have drawn as many as 100, most between the ages of 18 and 30.

"I think for many people, farming has been a lifelong dream, and now the timing is right," she said. Among the reasons she cited: the lifestyle, working in the fresh air and being one's own boss.

If farming is beginning to sound like an appealing career, there are downsides. The work involves tough physical labor, and vacations create problems when there are crops to be harvested and cows to be milked.

In addition, many farmers need second jobs to get health insurance or make ends meet. As the USDA notes, three-fifths of farms have sales of less than $10,000 a year, although some may be growing fruit trees or other crops that take a few years to develop.

None of those factors dissuaded 27-year-old Paul Mews. He left a high-paying job as a nuclear engineer last year to become a cattle rancher in Menard, Texas. His wife's family has been ranching for generations, and Mews decided he'd much rather join his in-laws and be his own boss than continue shuffling paperwork at the plant.

"When you're self-employed it's so much more fulfilling. You get paid what you're worth," he said. "It's really nice that what you put into it is what you're going to get back out."

___

Dinesh Ramde can be reached at dramde(at)ap.org.

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MILWAUKEE -- A Wisconsin factory worker worried about layoffs became a dairy farmer. An employee at a Minnesota nonprofit found an escape from her cubicle by buying a vegetable farm. A nuclear enginee...
MILWAUKEE -- A Wisconsin factory worker worried about layoffs became a dairy farmer. An employee at a Minnesota nonprofit found an escape from her cubicle by buying a vegetable farm. A nuclear enginee...
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11:35 AM on 04/18/2013
My grandfather through my 5x great grandfather were farmers. Its in my blood! I love to work in the soil.
-safes phoenix az
04:58 PM on 04/05/2013
That thing looks like it could use a transmission repair. I've hear of good place to get a transmission repair in erlanger ky if you need any help! Thanks for sharing!
09:20 PM on 01/31/2013
Farming is a great business to get in to. I would definitely consider it. It's probably as good as getting a taxi in phoenix. Both are really good things.
11:34 AM on 10/15/2012
I have been thinking about hiring a consulting company to help me launch my business. The direct audience that I am wanting to target is youth, but I have yet to figure out how to advertise to an adolescent. Has anyone had success in hiring someone from a business consulting bellbrook oh while launching a business? Is it worth the investment?
11:22 AM on 06/11/2012
I think that it is really cool that people are going back to being farmers. I remember a lot of family stories about my great grandparents on the farm. I work at an electric contractors company and think that having a farm would be really cool, but I think that I will stick with my job. I think that it would be awesome to be a farmer though. Plus, you would have a lot of great real estate.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
PurpleTomato
Exile the Secessionists
02:21 AM on 12/23/2011
The Farmer has to be an optimist or he wouldn't still be a Farmer.
Will Rogers
12:25 PM on 12/22/2011
Tried it, wouldn't recommend it, my means of getting into farming was working for other people, starting as a farmhand, and then finally dropping out of college to essentially become their veggie manager, a lot of things went wrong with the two farmers I worked for, the latter I absolutely despised.

Farming isn't an opportunity, realistically speaking you can only do it if the conditions are right, and not just weather conditions. If you want land, you'll need a lot of money, or you'll need inheritance, all of that coming before the infrastructure, which may cost as much as the land. If you're lucky you'll find and incubator, but those are very hard to find nowadays. Working for another farmer is good too, just make sure you mesh well with their values, very well, because you'll likely have a more intimate relationship with them than you would your boss, which can be a bad thing if you don't know what you're doing, and make sure you dot every "i" and cross every "t" when you go over the plan.

In case anyone's wondering, I eventually went back to school and became an electrical engineering major. Funny, because usually it goes the other way around. Maybe I'll build farming robots styled after the Prospero swarmbots.
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howtowasteyourlife
12:29 AM on 12/23/2011
Sounds like you either had unrealistic expectations, or you didn't want to succeed. Working for someone else's farm isn't the same as farming your own land.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moose Luck 99
GEOENGINEERINGWATCH DOT ORG
10:22 PM on 12/21/2011
USDA Conspires with Biotech Industry for Complete Deregulation of GMOs
Barbara H. Peterson on December 14th, 2011

The endgame? Complete deregulation for all genetically engineered crops, courtesy of your good friends at the USDA and their co-conspirators, Monsanto, et. al.. Paperwork? We don’t need no stinkin’ paperwork!

http://farmwars.info/?cat=123
Wib
Liberal former Marine who loves fly fishing and is
09:46 PM on 12/21/2011
If my grandfather hadn't sold the family farm (just a little more than 80 acres), I'd probably be a vegetable farmer today. At 66, it's too late for me to begin, but I'm very happy these young people are following their dreams. I worked on family farms as a child and enjoyed the labor, though it's brutally hard work in some cases. Hopefully, they will be more environmentally friendly than their forebears and hopefully the entire industry is moving in that direction. We don't need more dust bowls, clogged streams and dead birds. Of course, I know that it is corporate farming most responsible for those problems, I'm just hoping the new, young guys can influence them and the whole business.
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
09:20 PM on 12/21/2011
And the purpose of showing the worn old Farmall sitting dormant in the weeds is what? Is that pic suppose to show our farming "future"

hahahahahaha
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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sabelmouse
i love to tumble , ask me why .
07:07 AM on 12/22/2011
horses, the oil is running out, remember .
http://www.grist.org/sustainable-farming/2011-12-06-small-farmers-crave-horsepower
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
06:32 PM on 12/22/2011
Are you serious? From your pasts posts I think you are.

So now it's ok to work horses hard? Is Peta ok with that?

As for your link..it is really hilarious.
There is a pic of a New Holland mower conditioner being pulled by horses. Do you understand it runs off a PTO shaft powered by a motor that the horses are pulling? Fuel is used. Got it?
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howtowasteyourlife
12:24 AM on 12/23/2011
It's just a picture. The purpose is to add some visual interest to the article.
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richardacronin
06:52 PM on 12/21/2011
good luck buying land
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
howtowasteyourlife
12:26 AM on 12/23/2011
There's plenty of inexpensive land for sale, it's just not what most people would consider "good" land for farming. Luckily, there's a pretty simple fix for less-than-ideal soil.
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
10:48 AM on 12/24/2011
go buy the land and farm yourself you smart a88
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robear6987
oops ! did i offend you , my bad .
06:00 PM on 12/21/2011
RIGHT ON ! LETS END THE CORPORATE STRANGLE HOLD ON OUR COUNTRY . BUY LOCAL . THINK LOCAL , BUT BE AWARE OF GLOBAL CAUSE WE ARE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER.
05:18 PM on 12/21/2011
i love farming ,ive done it and was good at it , but it cost a fortune to get started and there are too many things that a person cant do by themselves .. you would have to be a very big operator just to pay one employee minimum wage , so with that said good luck lol
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Marcin A Mazurek
You live and learn. At any rate, you live. - D.A
06:07 PM on 12/21/2011
Or you know, family owned and run.
Because, you know, since it worked for thousands of years doesn't mean it doesn't work anymore - though it doesn't help that technically you're either a serf or rich in the first-place and don't want to dirty your manicured hands.
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howtowasteyourlife
12:27 AM on 12/23/2011
I don't think that's accurate, at all. I know quite a few small-scale, organic operations that don't require a lot of intensive labor (in other words, they're owner-operated) that pull in over $15k per acre. And that's profit, not revenue.
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08:59 AM on 12/23/2011
do you know what they are growing?
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
10:53 AM on 12/24/2011
15 k profit per acre? lol! do you have even the slightest clue what you are talking about? go back to your video games in moms basement.
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belldn3
Fascinated by red polish on women
04:47 PM on 12/21/2011
That's it, graduate high school and start pig farming. Yeeeeeeeeehaw!
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robear6987
oops ! did i offend you , my bad .
06:01 PM on 12/21/2011
YOUR SO LAME AND DUMB IT HURTS ME.
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belldn3
Fascinated by red polish on women
07:15 PM on 12/21/2011
What are you? Educated and rich or a virgin and creepy. Move out of your parents basement, and not into the attic.
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flaconoire
Anartist
04:18 PM on 12/21/2011
Smart! Growing your own food, will be a major advantage in the near future