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If you love to eat, or you love to enjoy
our vast open ranges on horseback, you appreciate Montana's
Agriculture Industry.
Your succulent steak, baked potato, Sunday omelet, chili and warm
wool sweater may all be made from Montana agricultural products.
Montana's core crops are cattle, wheat and barley, but we also grow
significant amounts of oats, corn, potatoes, dry beans, sugar beets,
sweet cherries, alfalfa seed, hay, dairy products, sheep and lambs,
wool, hogs and pigs, eggs and honey.
Not only is Montana's economic well-being dependent
on agriculture, but much of the beauty and wildlife we enjoy is
based on agriculture. Montanans enjoy their state. We're close to
both open lands and wild lands. Our wildlife relies on agricultural
land and forage as much or more than it does on wild lands, though
that varies by species. Fish, Wildlife and Park statistics from 1993
indicate that about 62 percent of mule deer and white-tailed
deer-hunting is on private land, and 33 percent of elk hunting takes
place there. In this context, said an FWP officer, private land is
almost synonymous with agricultural land.
About 63 percent of all Montana land is in agriculture. Montana
ranks second only to Texas for the number of acres devoted to
agriculture. Of Montana's 56.7 million acres in farms and ranches,
about 37 million acres of that is in rangeland that is shared by
wildlife. About 30 percent of the state's ag land is cropped, while
3.5 percent is in woodland.
There are 27,600 farms and ranches in Montana. Most are owned by
family farmers, though many family farms have incorporated,
confusing the statistics about the percent of family farms compared
to corporate farms.
The average Montana farm or
ranch has just over 2,000 acres, large by standards in the Eastern
United States, but not large for land where production is limited by
rainfall. Some parts of Montana receive as little as 10 inches of
rain a year, while the west slope of some mountain ranges can
receive four times that amount. On both Montana range and cropland,
rain is the most limiting production factor and a short growing
season adds to the challenge. Rain limits the amount and types of
forages for livestock, and similarly limits cropland production. A
small amount of cropland is irrigated. |