It's a way to know how well the soil on his land will retain moisture, and thus determine what crops are good to grow on that soil, or whether the enterprise of raising crops is even worth considering. Soils can be sandy (very high permeability = no water retention), clayey (very low permeability = too much water retention) or loamy (moderate permeability = ideal water retention).
The land was arable, allowing the farmer to plant successful crops.
Soil permeability is important to plants that lives on land. The space between soil particles are called pore spaces. Water and air filled these spaces. The size of pore spaces and the way in which the pore spaces are connected affect permeability. Because, permeability is the rate which water can pass through a porous material. Soils through which water passes quickly have a high permeability.
Land preparation depends on the farmer. For many years and in many countries plowing/tilling the soil was favored. In areas of high erosion plowing is not recommended and drill set seeding is practiced.
Well, water can move in may ways it can move slowly and in a fast way. This all depends on the land structure. So, what I mean is that if the land has no gaps or overlaps water will move a slow or medium speed. If the land is steep water will go fast.
Land is irreplaceable. Soil erosion results in crop reduction and farmers expend a lot of time and energy taking measures to prevent soil erosion.
A farmer would say that they are worried most of their land will be taken away due to confederation. They are also worried after loosing their land, they will not have land left to farm on, loosing most of their profits. Sorry, that's all I know xx
The farmer lived on rural land.
He is a tenant farmer.
For being a farmer there is no need to have your own land
They do that because they would divide their land among their sons and after several generations the average farmer would have about an acre of land. So with a little bit of money they had no choice but to sell their land to aristocrats and become tenant farmers.
A tenant farmer or sharecropper.
Farmer
Farmer/Land Owner
farmer
A Sharecropper is a farmer who doesn't own the land he farms. The landlord that owns the land gives the farmer a place to live, buys the seed for the farmer to plant. The farmer gets a share of the profits for his labor. It was not usually much, but his family had a place to live and food on the table.
The cast of The Last Farmer in Gullah Land - 2013 includes: Buz Kloot
A farmer is provided with land, tools and seed. He plants, tends and harvests the crop, and divides the profit with the land owner.