There was a book on the contract gardening or pick it yourself concept 20 or 25 years ago. The title was someething like, "make 100,000 on a acre of ground." Basically the customers subscribe and you deliver them a week's supply of available veges during the growing season.
Horse owners are hard to please and often want to feed sedentary horses with way too much protien (alfalfa) and when they bloat, then they ration the alfalfa and the poor horses whose instinct is to eat grass constantly then eat the barn because they are empty all the time. The least dust leads to rejected bales whether dirt or real mold. After a few years selling horse hay, I decided it was more valuable to me plowed under to fertilize corn, but you have to have a market.
Find your markets, then pick your crops. The best crop without a market is worse than worthless, it cost to raise so its a looser.
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Today's Featured Article - The Nuts and Bolts of Fasteners - Part 2 - by Curtis Von Fange. In our previous article we discussed capscrews, bolts, and nuts along with their relative hardness and thread sizes. In this segment we will finish up on our fasteners and then work with ways to keep them from loosening up in the field. Capscrews, bolts and nuts are not the only means of holding two parts together. When dealing with thinner metals like sheet tin, a long bolt and
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