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A Crop Farm grows something. This
‘something’ might be grains, fruit, nuts, vegetables, tobacco, cotton,
food for cattle, or even flowers. Some
examples of these might be:
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Grains
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Wheat,
corn, rye,
oats,
barley
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Fruits
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Apples,
pears,
peaches,
plums,
oranges, olives,
figs, cranberries,
avocados, pineapples
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Nuts
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Coconuts,
peanuts, walnuts,
pecans,
almonds,
chestnuts
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Vegetables
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Tomatoes,
lettuce,
spinach,
celery,
potatoes,
radishes, broccoli
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Cattle food
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Alfalfa,
clover,
hay,
grasses
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| Other
crops |
Cotton,
flowers |
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OUR
crop pages with more information!
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Nuts,
cotton, flowers,
wheat, corn, Christmas
trees, cranberries
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People have been
growing crops all through history. As
people traveled from one continent to another, they took seeds with them
so that they could grow food in their new country.
Early settlers knew that they needed to be able to grow their own
food if they wanted to live.
Today, farmers know
much more about growing crops than they did then.
Different crops are grown so that the farmer will get larger fruit
or larger seeds. There is a
lot of science in agriculture today. Growing
a better grain, fruit or vegetable means that the farmer needs to know:
1. What kind of plant
will grow well in their soil, 2. How to get the soil ready for planting,
3. How to grow, harvest and
store the crop, 4. How to get
rid of weeds and crop pests, and 5. How
to sell it once it's been grown.
Three-fourths of the world eats grain products
as an important food source. Grains
are the oldest kind of crop. Most
grains belong to the grass family and are grown for their seeds.
Some of these are corn, wheat, rice, barley, oats and rye.
Grains are usually used to feed people, but sometimes they are used
to feed animals.
Farmers today
depend on science a lot. They
study the soil to be sure it is right for the crops they plan to grow.
A farmer tests his soil and uses chemicals to fix or add what might
be missing from it.
Crops depend on water.
A good farmer grows crops that use the water that is available.
Crops might use a combination of rainfall and irrigation.
A farmer wouldn’t grow a crop that needed tons of water in a
place where it never rains. He
wouldn’t plant a crop that needs to be drier on land that is marshy or
doesn’t drain rainwater well.
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The picture to the right is an example of irrigation on a
farm. Irrigation is when a farmer has to spray
water on his crops because the rain isn't enough. These
sprayers travel over the fields on wheels, spraying as they move.
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Farmers also have to watch for pests.
Pests might be plant diseases, weeds, or insects that can ruin a
crop. The farmer has to know what is
ruining the crop and what to do about it. This might mean
putting just the right kind and right amount of pesticide on it.
Farmers use scientists and agricultural experts to help them figure
these things out.
Sometimes birds and rodents
will eat the seeds or plants. In the past, scarecrows were used to
scare away these animals. See our Scarecrow
Page for more information!
Crop farmers have to:
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Get the soil ready to
plant [make a place for the seeds or plants to be planted.] |
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Plant the crop. |
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Cultivate the crop.
[Pull out and bury the weeds between plants.] |
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Pick the crop and
separate it into its usable parts. |
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Sell the crop, store it,
or make it into food. Some
crops become feed for animals and are stored in silos. |
Check
out our Farm Machinery page! |