The term used to refer to the action of paying a landowner to plant and harvest a crop is "sharecropping".
When it is due for harvest.
A crop is the harvest of the produce of some plant. Crops cover any natural food substance which is not an animal product. Crop farming is the way of life of people who farm in this manner as their source of income.
Process them. Ship or sell them out to markets for purchase.
Yield is the amount of usable crop per plant, per acre or per 'measurement'.
The only time I've ever seen a farmer plow under a viable crop was when the market was so bad that it would cost more to harvest than it would sell for. The plowed under crop will break down and provide organic fertilizer, so at least it will have some value then. Other times the farmers plant green crops with the sole intention of plowing them under to improve the land. Legumes and rye grass are popular for that use.
Whether a farmer can sue a landowner for not being allowed to harvest their crop depends on the wording of the contract between the two parties. Assuming the contract was correctly prepared the answer would be yes.
sharecropping
sharecropping
Yes, cotton is a cash crop plant that is planted in monoculture for harvest and sale.
The portion of the crop the landowner owed to the sharecropper
All of the above.
A crop is whichever type of seed you pick to plant & harvest, or to grow in a co-op.
You can't harvest food but you can harvest crops...depending on what Vesta"s shop sells.To plant a crop buy seeds, but it can"t be on a winter season
Total Time from Seed To Harvest In Egypt = (Time For Crop to Grow Normally) + (Time to Travel To Egypt To Plant Seeds) + (Time To Return To Egypt When Crop is ready to Harvest) I can be just as stupid as the person who asked this stupid question!
The problem in the story "Harvest" by Loreto Paras Sulit revolves around the conflict between the wealthy landowner and the impoverished tenant farmers. The landowner wants to harvest the rice crop early to maximize profits, while the tenant farmers want to wait for the rice to fully ripen so they can yield a better harvest. This disagreement leads to a power struggle and highlights the exploitation and inequality present in the agrarian system.
Well, if you plant a crop that takes one day to be ready for harvest, one day after it is ready, it will wither.
The dead plant material gets broke down by organisms in the soil. The nutrients can then be used by the next year's crop.