

A farm is an area of land, including various structures, devoted primarily to the practice of producing and managing food (produce, grains, or livestock), fibers and, increasingly, fuel. It is the basic production facility in food production. Farms may be owned and operated by a single individual, family, community, corporation or a company. A farm can be a holding of any size from a fraction of a hectare to several thousand hectares.
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Tiny Farm Blog | organic vegetable gardening: veggies, herbs, flowers ...
Organic gardening: vegetable gardening with two acres and some tools. A photo blog about growing organic food! ... Small Farm Central: Blog. Small Scale Grain ...tinyfarmblog.com/" Financial Permaculture in Hohenwald thefarmblog.org: News and Views ...
Also see The Farm Blog [...] Financial Permaculture: From the Invention Room at ... just found the Farm blog searching for info about Financial Permaculture. ...thefarmblog.org/?p=29Farm Blogs from Around the World
HELP SUPPORT FARM BLOGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD. ... This is a beautiful blog written by a lady who has various farm animals and a camel. ...www.farmblogs.blogspot.com/Owl Farm Blog
... Farm Blog. News and views from Owl Farm ... caretaker at Owl Farm in the 80s. ... Search this blog: Send Owl Farm an e-mail. Archives. April 2009. February ...owlfarmblog.com/Steed Farms Blog
Steed Farms Blog. Organic Trial Garden. Will they make the cut? Sunday, April ... Eatwell Farm News. Catalan Garden. Boulderbelt Farm Blog. Bifurcated Carrots ...steedfarm.blogspot.com/

A farm is an area of land, including various structures, devoted primarily to the practice of producing and managing food (produce, grains, or livestock), fibers and, increasingly, fuel. It is the basic production facility in food production. Farms may be owned and operated by a single individual, family, community, corporation or a company. A farm can be a holding of any size from a fraction of a hectare to several thousand hectares.
A business producing tree fruits or nuts is called orchard; a vineyard produces grapes. The stable is used for operations principally involved in the training of horses. Stud and commercial farms breed and produce other animals and livestock. A farm that is primarily used for the production of milk and dairy is a dairy farm. A market garden or truck farm is a farm that grows vegetables, but little or no grain. Additional specialty farms include fish farms, which raise fish in captivity as a food source, and tree farms, which grow trees for sale for transplant, lumber, or decorative use. A plantation is usually a large farm or estate, on which cotton, tobacco, coffee or sugar cane, are cultivated, usually by resident laborers.Fact: date=August 2008
The development of farming and farms was an important component in establishing towns. Once people have moved from hunting and/or gathering and from simple horticulture to active farming, social arrangements of roads, distribution, collection, and marketing can evolve. With the exception of plantations and colonial farms, farm sizes tend to be small in newly-settled lands and expand as transportation and markets become sophisticated. Farming rights have been the central tenet of a number of revolutions, wars of liberation, and post-colonial economics.Fact: date=August 2008
Etymology
The word came via French ferme from Late Latin firma = "fixed payment" from Latin firmus = "firm, solid", and originally referred to a big landowner farming out his land among other men to run it, rather than running it all himself. As times have changed fewer people are needed to assist in running the farm because of the increase of mechanization.
Farming
see: Agriculture The term farming covers a wide spectrum of agricultural production work. At one end of this spectrum is the subsistence farmer, who farms a small area with limited resource inputs, and produces only enough food to meet the needs of his/her family. At the other end is commercial intensive agriculture, including industrial agriculture. Such farming involves large fields and/or numbers of animals, large resource inputs (pesticides, fertilizers, etc.), and a high level of mechanization. These operations generally attempt to maximize financial income from grain, produce, or livestock.


























