What’s the best biome for agriculture?

Filed under: Self Reliance |

sustainable agriculture
Image by friendsoffamilyfarmers

Question by bianca: What’s the best biome for agriculture?
As in sustainable agriculture, to sustain a community, etc.
That there’ll be enough food in summer as well as in winter..

Thanks!

Feel free to answer in the comment section below

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2 Responses to What’s the best biome for agriculture?

  1. To farm in your own country, to support your local farmers, and for that community to buy local food, and not abroad because it is suppose to be cheaper.

    Also encourage people to start farming, grant aid, decent loan terms etc.

    These farms can grow animals and crops and managed properly you would have enough food to serve people all year round, even if it does meaning running winter calving and lambings to increase output

    Flying Farmer
    January 20, 2013 at 11:59 am
    Reply

  2. Temperate forest. The soils are decent (not as good as prairie soils), rainfall is regular and adequate, and temperatures are within a reasonable range such that season extension technologies can provide a crop for most of the year. Other biomes are too cold, have poor soils, too little rain, or too much of it. When done correctly, though, any biome can be productive (except the arctic).

    arbela47000
    January 20, 2013 at 12:28 pm
    Reply

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