An Analysis of Irrigation Farming in the Warwick-McVille Project AreaDepartment of Horticulture, Agricultural Experiment Station, North Dakota State University, 1979 - Irrigation farming - 31 pages |
Contents
DRYLAND AND IRRIGATED FARM PRODUCTION OPERATIONS COMPARED | 9 |
Optimum Management | 15 |
FARM ENTERPRISE SUMMARY | 26 |
1 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
1,050 Native Pasture 270 Dryland Crops 780 Total Cropland Alfalfa Hay AREA Basic Crop AVAILABLE WATER CAPACITY barley basic crop farm beef cow herd cent of crop COMBINATION OF CROP confectionery sunflowers corn grain Corn Silage crop and livestock CROP ENTERPRISES crop farm plan Cropland Acres 1,050 cropping pattern changed dairy herd dryland cropping pattern Dryland Crops Acres dryland farm Durum enterprises except potatoes farm plan Table Feed and Livestock FEED AND/OR LIVESTOCK feed grains feed with remaining Feeder Steer field beans Flax HIGH AVAILABLE WATER HIGHEST PROFIT COMBINATION Hundredweight increased net income irri irrigated and dryland Irrigated Crops Acres Livestock Alternatives livestock feed LOW AVAILABLE WATER management levels Millet model farm Navy Beans Nelson counties Normal Management North Dakota Pinto Beans produced PURCHASING FEED AND/OR remaining per cent rotational limits sugarbeets Sunflowers Oil sunflowers were included Total Cropland Acres utilized as livestock WARWICK-MCVILLE IRRIGATION AREA WATER CAPACITY SOILS winter rye