the problem with growing cash crops was that they had a starving time when bad things would happen to the land/ground. So the people back then had had a starving time, which was not a very good thing to happen because alot of people died due to this starving time that had happened. Most of the people lived on what was left of the land. But later on during that time also, they had got back on top with the crops that were growing more & more everyday. The people that had been in that time also had a diesese time which also spread through all the food. and Also killed thousands of people, indians, africans.. Many people!
right so, what they said, except its e) None of the above in NovaNET
a huge, cheap, work force was needed to grow it.
you cant eat them
Inappropriate soil, short growing season, too cold in Winter for perennials to survive.
It didn't hurt small farmers since it was the small farmer growing the crops. The sale of the crops supported the family farm.
Growing cash crops like tobacco and cotton overworked the land.
Virginia, Maryland, South Carolina and Georgia were reliant on cash crops.
The soil and climate in the southern colonies were better for growing cash crops which required a large number of slave workers.
a large labor force
By growing cash crops west
a huge, cheap, work force was needed to grow it.NovaNETThere is no problem with growing cash crops that I am aware of. Hay is a cash crop I grow.
A problem with cash crops is that they are labor-intensive and not economical without have enough labor to attend to them. When there are many workers to plant and harvest cash crops, then there is more profit.
The problem with growing cash crops is that it utilizes all available land for one single crop. This cuts down the amount of land that is needed for food crops. In addition, raising one cash crop only can cause the soil to degrade as a result.
a huge, cheap, work force was needed to grow it
growing cash crops such as cotton and tobacco -apex ;)
A huge, cheap, work force was needed to grow it. (NovaNET) (:
Growing cash crops like tobacco and cotton overworked the land.
The growing of cash crops affected the societies in the states of Virginia and Maryland because it caused them to invade the Native Americans to take their land. Growing certain cash crops was hard on the soil and they needed more land.
Growing cash crops like tobacco and cotton overworked the land.
The practice of slavery made the growing of cash crops profitable in the South. It was decades after slavery that mechanization made it extremely profitable again.
It was the best way to grow large cash crops.
Cash cropping involves growing crops primarily for sale in markets or for profit, while subsistence farming focuses on growing crops for the sole purpose of feeding oneself and one's family. Cash cropping is more commercial and market-driven, aiming to generate income, while subsistence farming is more self-sufficient and focused on meeting basic food needs.