Posted on 09/30/2017 2:03:05 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
guess we don’t need illegals as cheap farm labor anymore.
My thought as well. A similar development of autonomous mechanized agriculture is underway in Japan in order to address her need for farm labor. A generation from now, much of the hard labor of farming will be a thing of the past.
I’m intrigued by vertical farming.
“World’s first hands-free farmland in Britain hailed a success”
Yes, a robot can grow crops.....but where’s the love!?
Once they figure this out for fruits and vegetables there really isn’t a rationale anymore for temp farm labor, e.g. illegal immigration.
Isaac Asimov CAVES OF STEEL
Once they figure out how to do it across all industries, no more need for workers beyond a few people in any industry.
Like we don’t spend enough time on equipment maintenance now!
No more peeing on everyone’s salads.
Yep. smile.
“Farming is easy, if your pencil is your plow, and the nearest field is 1,000 miles away”
And that’s why Britain isn’t crawling with wetbacks.....besides, the Muzzies are taking up all the prime turf.....
It’s alarming how charming it is to be a-farming.
“The whole project cost less than 268,000 U.S. dollars”
That is about the price of 1 combine today.
And about a 1/4 of the price of one of the advanced Cotton harvesting machines. (actually gins in field)
There is something to be said for the old ways. We, humans, get reliant on tech and get soft and stupid, then we need to do gor ourselves what the pioneers did on a daily basis...
And one day we are going to pay the price for forgetting the old ways.
Yes.
My family has owned/operated farms in this county since 1889. I was 1st to move away. Was gone 25 years, back since 1995.
I have no illusions about the reality of it. It is a very difficult way to make a living. We own our land and equipment and are not in current terms “large farmers”.
Many local farmers today work 10,000 acres. Talk about exposure. And the equipment cost is huge.
Problem today? The strong dollar has killed our export in many crops because of exchange rates. That and input cost push due to “technology” (i.e. seed law)
We want to continue, it will not be easy.
My father is 92, has farmed here all his life except for 2+ years in Europe during WWII. He was also a general contractor, he was very good at that too.
He still lives alone and drives his pickup and car (locally). He is happiest if he can still be involved, he likes to set on the turn row and “supervise”. He is a great guy. Respected by all who know him.
It will still require security. With their domestic terrorists being so active, unattended crops will be poisoned or destroyed in rapid succession.
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