Neither, they grow weevily wheat and/or barley.
Fresh produce of every type, hay and corn silage for the dairy farmers,
Dairy farmers grow dairy and the have horses. All true, at least in our case. We do have cows and horses. We grow hay and corn. We also have small crops of pumpkins, oats, have chickens for eggs, and even a few peacocks. In terms of growing, I would say Corn, Hay and oats are fairly normal for our area.
Crops: Wheat, soybeans, sunflowers, corn....Livestock: Cattle, sheepsunflowers ,corn ,and soybeans,wheat
Dairy farmers grow dairy and the have horses. All true, at least in our case. We do have cows and horses. We grow hay and corn. We also have small crops of pumpkins, oats, have chickens for eggs, and even a few peacocks. In terms of growing, I would say Corn, Hay and oats are fairly normal for our area.
Corn, Soybean, hay, sod, grain (wheat, maybe barley?)
No. Kentucky farmers also produce wheat, barley, sorghum, and hay, along with many other crops.
Mushrooms, strawberrys, apples, corn, hay, oats,
Very much so. In 2009, Illinois farmers produced 2 million tons of hay from 610,000 acres.
They grow a wide variety of crops, but the top four are corn, soybeans, wheat and hay.
Very much so. In 2009, Illinois farmers produced 2 million tons of hay from 610,000 acres.
Minnesota does not grow anything. The farmers of Minnesota grow a wide variety of crops, including corn, soybeans, wheat, hay, potatoes, beans, sunflowers, barley, oats, canola, flaxseed, sugarbeets (Minnesota is #1 among US states in sugarbeet acreage), a variety of vegetables, nursery/greenhouse crops, Christmas trees, and others. As far as livestock, Minnesota farmers raise cattle (both beef and dairy, though they are a leading dairy cattle state), sheep, hogs, chickens, turkeys (#1 in turkey inventory), and other livestock.
Alaska's frigid climate severely limits its agricultural productivity. According to the USDA, Alaska produces only hay and very limited acreages of oats, barley, and potatoes.