How to Become a Successful Farmer

If you want to find real success in the field of farming, then you have to devote your entire career to it, and you have to be willing to do things that not a lot of other people in other professions are willing to do. It’s true, being a successful farmer demands a lot of hard work!

To find out exactly what it takes, read on.

Stay on the right side of your fence and the law

It’s not always easy to stay on the right side of the law as a farmer, especially when it comes to land ownership, but it’s pivotal that you do. If you don’t, your farming resume will be blotted forever, and you’ll never be able to build up a reputation or network of farming partners for yourself as a result.

In regards to land ownership and agricultural tenancies, disputes are frequent. It wouldn’t take a lot for a neighbouring farm to accuse you of encroaching onto their land without permission, especially if they feel as if their livelihood is being put under threat by you doing so. Be aware that you might not even be aware of this happening, as something as seemingly innocuous as one your chickens straying off of your land and onto the land of another can cause disputes. To combat this, you have to be ready at all times to fight any claims made against you; Lanyon Bowdler deal with agricultural disputes claims, and they’re the type of solicitor that you should be forging a partnership with now, even if you haven't had any problems with the law before. Doing so will see you prepared when you have to fight any legal battles and subsequently your reputation.

Embrace the latest tech

Farms aren’t always associated with technology, but if you want to find success on yours, then you need to be embracing the latest and best tech that there is on the market, no matter what your farming colleagues might say.

First, this means embracing the Internet of Things. The IoT is having an impact on most areas of life and is even impacting homes, but agriculture is where it is making its biggest splash. It is making communication out in fields as cohesive as it has ever been through the way it is monitoring and measuring them with precision. Drones do a pretty good job when monitoring fields, too, no matter how big they are. If there’s a broken fence a mile away or if there’s a crop that’s died right in the corner of the field, a drone can pick it up. Importantly, if trespassers have come through the back gate, drone technology can be used to catch and identify them with ease.

In truth, farming is a 24/7 job, and only when you treat it as such will you become a successful farmer. Only when you take the advice above will you be able to find farming success, too, so make sure that you do!

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Pete White Pete White

Love Shrewsbury editor and chief developer at The Web Orchard, find out more on petejwhite.com

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