Farmers
Yes, South America has more forest land than farmland.
Hemp
The main cash crops in the south were rice, tobacco, and indigo.
well in the south the two main crops where cotton and tobacco
corn, potatoes, and bananas
Farmers
If they flood they could damage the crops because farmers their plant crops close to the rivers so they get the water
The address of the Farmland Public Library is: 116 South Main Street, Farmland, 47340 0189
Yes, South America has more forest land than farmland.
rural district = plateland farmland = plaas
The crops in the South were cash crops and crops in the North were consumable crops.
The crops in the South were cash crops and crops in the North were consumable crops.
In 1860, there were actually more farms in the North than in the South. Northern farms were typically smaller and produced crops like wheat. But agriculture was still the backbone of the South's economy. In the South, farms were much larger -- many had more then 1,000 acres. (1 acre is about 1 football field) These huge plantations grow cash crops like tobacco, rice, and sugar. The most important crop of all was cotton. All the crops grown in the South relied on a large slave workforce. In addition the South had to pay taxes on many of the crops they exported. Many in the South felt they were taxed unfairly compared to the North.. and I agree with this fact...
One of the methods of farming in the South after the war involved renting land from a big land owner thereby paying all of the expenses and also reaping any profits, is called tenant farming. The land for a tenant farmer is rented for them to grow crops.
eggplant
What was the main crops in the south during 1820 and 1865?
the South grew those crops