OP
svenlylethor
Bronze Member
Do you like, just stand or hate your current job/career?
Is your current job/career secure or shaky?
Can YOU make a living on the small family farm?
If the city is growing and planting houses on farm land, will you be able to grow the farm either by buying new acreage or renting?
Have you done a business plan on how you expect to make money on the family farm? The trend in farming seems to be for the farms to grow to giant size with medium size farms going away. Smaller farms are popping up with very specific markets like goat cheese making, CSA, farm tourism/U Pick Its, etc.
Will working the family farm be more or less stressful than your current job/career?
You said you don't really want to live in UT. Will the positives of moving back to the farm out weigh living in UT? Will you eventually regret moving back to UT?
What do YOU really want to DO with YOUR life? Think long and hard about that question.
The positives I see is that you want to farm and that your parents are going to need help.
It sounds like you are at a cross road in life with this decision. Take time to think it through very carefully. Whatever you do decide, do not ever second guess the decision. When you make the decision, make sure that you are as confident with the decision as best you can be, move forward and don't look back.
Later,
Dan
I like the way you think.
I like my job but I think I'll be ready to start another one in the next year... right now it's either working internationally, working for a large corporation like John deere or AGCO, getting an MBA, or settling back home with a job and the farm on the side.
I don't think I could make a living on the farm by itself but I'd have a full-time job. 80 acres with our equipment isn't too hard to farm IMO. I do think about doing something different with our farm though. I think about making it certified organic, maybe doing a CSA. Not sure if farm tourism would work on our land. I see alfalfa as the easiest option because of the profit margins and amount of work. livestock is a much bigger commitment. Working extra in the fields during the summer and not working in the winter is much easier than handling both livestock and fields.