Maya should grow wheat on all 40 acres for the best return on investment.
If you have both a home farm and the English one you can store up to 400 bushels. The stores are no longer separate, so you can use all bushels on both farms. If you only have a home farm you can store up to 200 bushels.
If you have both a home farm and the English one you can store up to 400 bushels. The stores are no longer separate, so you can use all bushels on both farms. If you only have a home farm you can store up to 200 bushels.
Average corn yield for the farms in 2012 to 2014 was 7.85 metric tons per hectare (125 bushels per acre). Average farm yields ranged from approximately 5.79 metric tons per hectare for one of the Brazilian farms (92 bushels per acre) to 10.75 metric tons per hectare for the Iowa farm (171 bushels per acre).
Both farms are going to have a variety of different crops on their farms. Both places are also going to sell their crops for money.
No. Such farms are becoming few and far between, and are more often small hobby farms rather than large "commercial" farms.
Funny thing that many people don't realize is that commercial farms and family farms are one and the same. Thus, there really is no issue between them. In the US at least 97% of all farms are family farms. What most people consider to be a "corporate farm" (a farm which is owned and operated by unrelated members or a parent corporation) makes up approximately 0.3% of all US farms.
The answer is Bonanza Farms. Hope this helps. :)
of course!
small farms
small farms
State farms are agricultural enterprises owned and operated by the government, while collective farms are cooperatives where farmers pool their resources and work together on the same land. State farms are managed by government officials, while collective farms are typically managed by elected committees of farmers. State farms focus on efficiency and productivity, while collective farms emphasize communal ownership and sharing of resources.
idk tell me NOW!!