FL is also a big cattle state, fwiw.
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..When I’m talking about farming, I mean having a patch of green earth and livestock that lives off the green earth. There is no major harvesting of grains and this or that being left or any sort of complicated operation. You stake off a defined area and turn the animals out and check on them once or twice a day. They do the rest. That’s how livestock farming has been for the average dirt farmer in history.
...My cows get a mineral block once every month or two depending on how fast they eat and lick it down.
The reason my animals can live here is I picked tough animals that were historically raised like this.
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I agree that is how farming has historically been done in your area of Florida. I would agree it is because the land is too poor to support much more....
Florida is in fact one of the harshest places to farm in the lower 48. The mild winters don’t make up for the terrible soil and the drought-flood cycles that define the climate. ...
Generally livestock was freeranged in Florida. The cows, horses, pigs, sheep and chickens were turned out into the woods to fend for themselves. This began with the Spaniards and continued through the English, French, and American periods. Natural selection created over the centuries Florida landraces of all of the mentioned livestock that can take care of themselves.
The primary difference I think between myself and many of you is that people in the interior of Florida were living 19 century existences at the end of the 20th century and I witnessed first hand how poor people live off the land. The livestock has to take care of itself or else it can’t be kept. That was the norm in human history....
Again, those of you in the free range naysayer crowd ...harsh winters,...But you all know the original position you’re starting from is doubting that chickens can forage for what they need even the warm months. Otherwise you all would be arguing “yes, chickens can get what they need when its warm. We just contend they need supplemental food in the winter.” Which is not what most of you are really arguing.
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I don't think anyone is naysaying chickens foraging for themselves, only that it's not possible for everyone to raise chickens in this manner everywhere.
You say Florida is one of the harshest places in the country to farm, so of course I had to go look.
https://www.fdacs.gov/Agriculture-Industry/Florida-Agriculture-Overview-and-Statistics#:~:text=In 2020 Florida ranked first,corn; and fourth in peanuts.
Florida’s 47,400 farms and ranches utilize 9.7 million acres and continue to produce a wide variety of safe and dependable food products. From the citrus groves and the nurseries in Central and South Florida, to the vegetables in various regions around the state, to the cattle and calves throughout the state, these farms and ranches provide Florida with a large and stable economic base. In 2020 Florida ranked first in the United States in the value of production for oranges, sugarcane, fresh market tomatoes and watermelons; second in the value of production for strawberries; third in cabbage, grapefruit and fresh market sweet corn; and fourth in peanuts.
Can't be all that bad.
I wonder if that is behavioral or because they need to range further to meet their nutritional requirements or a combination of both?
Thank you. This is interesting.https://books.google.com/books?id=POVaAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=inauthor:"Herbert+Atkinson"&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&source=gb_mobile_search&ovdme=1&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiXs7mF_Z35AhXUsYQIHSagC8sQ6wF6BAgIEAU#v=onepage&q&f=false
There’s one I have on hand and I’ll pull some more this evening. This one doesn’t got into detail on specifically winter raising but it more generally talks about them taking care of themselves in chapter 6 via foraging.
Oh. I must have misunderstood what you were saying about the historical, worldwide farming methods....
Generally people who tried to homestead in Florida starved if they didn’t take up hunting or fishing and learn how to grow things that likes the soil. The Spaniards constantly failed to establish inland colonies due to the inability to farm European-style here. The kind of jack-of-all-trades farming homestead farming practiced in much of the US didn’t historically work here.
The plant crops you’re talking about are industrial mono-crops selected either because they’re odd-man-out plant that love Florida’s poor, acidic, soil and temperamental climate, or because (as is the case in most of these) they’re grown by Big Agg through the wide-scale dumping of industrial fertilizers and soil amendments, which is destroying Florida’s environment.
You're right, I shouldn't have laughed.Florida is in fact one of the harshest places to farm in the lower 48. The mild winters don’t make up for the terrible soil and the drought-flood cycles that define the climate. “There’s a reason” that Florida was a frontier wilderness until the 1960s or later. If you’re laughing at my statements about Florida, you’re doing so from a position of ignorance about the land.
I thought you were saying that chickens should be able to forage for their own food ALL YEAR LONG. Just in the good months is a very different thing.That food may have to be put up in winter for some livestock doesn’t diminish my point, because most of you in the naysayer camp are doubting that chickens can forage for themselves without major human intervention even in the rich, warm, months. And that’s where you are simply not aware of how people have done it in the real world out of necessity.
Well no, it wasn’t that Florida was fertile. If you ever heard about the first European explorers like Hernando de Soto and Ponce de Leon, their expeditions generally ended in disaster because they couldn’t find much food to eat. Most of the early explorers died of starvation and disease, if not attacks from the natives. The natives practiced very limited farming based around a handful of crops that were adapted to Florida. Native settlements concentrated around fertile pockets of hardwoods and bamboo thickets we call hammocks and canebrakes respectively. Places where leaves and grasses decayed and created pockets of fertility. The natives were mostly relying on natural produce such as palmetto berries, acorns, and swamp cabbage (palm-tree heart), but more than that they were hunting and fishing.I am very much interested in Native American farming methods, to preserve soil fertility. I’ve learned about about growing produce in NY by studying the Iroquois methods, but have not done research on other areas of the US. Looks like Florida used to be a very fertile place. Unfortunately settlers ruined much of the land.
http://nativeamericannetroots.net/diary/953
I personally would love to range my chickens 12 months of the year but our winters can be brutal. Mine will be allowed to range in the snow, however there isn’t much to find when there’s 2 feet of snow or it’s below
I wonder if that is behavioral or because they need to range further to meet their nutritional requirements or a combination of both?