OK, if my time spent here does nothing else, we need to stop holding on to this corporate farm myth......
From the USDA:
Under the ERS definition,
family farms represent 97.6 percent of all U.S. farms and are responsible for 85 percent of U.S. farm production.
Taken from here:
USDA ERSI will give you farms have gotten bigger. This has been going on since somebody discovered they were better at making beads than growing food, and could trade the beads for the food they needed. Since farmer Ug didn't need to spend time making beads anymore, he could do what he was really good at, and grow more food. Since he was now supplying two families and Mrs Ug still got her beads.
Farming has constantly changed. I am still amazed that 1954 was the year that there were more tractors than horses on US farms. 1954!! That's not that long ago.
The price of farmland, equipment, seed, feed, buildings, everything that goes into living, has increased faster than the price of the crops and livestock being sold. This means you need to have more for sale, at smaller margins, to make a living.
There is a thread going on right now, someplace on LTH, about the price of beef tenderloin. This is what happens when production isn't plentiful enough to flood the demand. The prices go up. The beef guys are making pretty good money right now, and the herds aren't expanding because there is more money in selling calves for beef, than keeping them for breeding.
Everybody wants cheap food, including the Gov't, this has led to bigger farms.
My great grandpa was happy to grow enough food to feed his family, and have extra to sell for a roof over his head, coffee & gunpowder. Today, one US farmer feeds 155 people. And those 155 people don't want to pay too much to eat.
The old barns aren't useful anymore,they are too small to park today's machinery in. The number of livestock you need to make a living today pretty much makes these old barns obsolete, as feeding floors. Property taxes are so high you can't afford to have them around if they aren't useful...... so that's the end of the old barns.
As romantic as old farm houses are, they are outdated, crooked, drafty and hard to heat. Most people would like to live in a modern home..... old farm houses are going away. As the small farms are bought up, the old houses are being torn down or abandoned. It has become so hard to get rid of people that quit paying rent, that's it's better to not start renting the house out in the first place. That's not said to be cold and heartless, but it's a fact in the modern world.
I've been rambling again...... I hope this all makes sense. Just because farms have gotten larger, doesn't make them less of a family farm, they just look different. I'm sure my Grandpa grumbled about the number of cars on the road, making it hard to drive his buggy........ and we grumble about potholes on roads that were mud 100 years ago, times change.
...... but please, stop thinking that corporations are running American agriculture. Nothing could be further from the truth.....
I'm kicking my soapbox back into the corner.....
Tim
I will edit this to say I am in no way, intending to degrade, besmirch, or in any way trying to make Elfin look or feel bad, in any way shape or form. It just happened to be that post that hit when I was in the mood to type, kind of like the perfect storm. I miss seeing the little farms/farmers too, but they are gone. You can't change it and there is nobody to blame.