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FarmersDigest
Ridin' The Range
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lol yes indeed, and man am I forever grateful for it!Well, you ask for help around here, and you get a deluge!
lol yes indeed, and man am I forever grateful for it!Well, you ask for help around here, and you get a deluge!
I just did a quick search and their is a fair amount of information available on the Oregon Department of Agricultural website, with a lot of information broken down by county. Also, along the lines of what someone else said, weather and soil will dictate your options. The state website also has agricultural maps that give some of that type of information too.
Isn't eastern Oregon fairly dry? I was looking at some of those maps and areas there are listed as "arid" and "semi arid". You would need to know that for sure and if irrigation is required and available water source.
All of this information would also dictate the fair price for the land.
Yes, that was one of the first thing's he told us, just when DH thought about asking.Ok, I was just about to mention water rights. Glad to know they come with the place.
Just some random thoughts - a turnkey operation sounds great, but a place that big is a lot of work. Countless details. Can you or your DH do the equipment maintenance and repair yourselves or hire it out - to someone who will come to you, or will you have to find a way to get the equipment to them? Fixing fence, keeping the water supply lines and troughs in good order and cleaned, barn maintenance - stuff always breaks around a farm.
Doctoring the animals - everything from breeding safely (for you and the animals), to vaccinations of the pregnant cows at the right time, watching for the births and knowing what you can handle and when to call the vet (plan on sleepless nights), shots for the calves, bottle feeding some of them if the mom doesn't make it (and what do you do with dead stock - bury it on your property or have someone come get it?), castrating, tagging, weaning, marketing, selling, separating into groups to prepare for selling, processing, breeding.
Check into insurance, for the farm and yourselves. If Heaven forbid you or DH gets injured (and there's lots of ways to do that on a farm), you may need to hire someone in to help.
It's exciting, but it's a lot of work, and this is just from someone who has 6 acres, not a 'real' farm. Go into it with your eyes wide open, and realize that it *will* be a lot more work, and cost more money, than you ever thought. If you love it and can make it work, it will be worth it though.