[...]
> 
> There was/is an Amish community near where my grandfather farmed and
> where I spent much of my life that continues -- east central Illinois -
> - to farm profitably with horses today -- and on farms that are
> unimaginably small -- often less than a 100 acres, rarely more than 200
> -- to the industrialized farmers of the region.

That doesn't sound very small to me, so I googled it. It's quite small by US
standards, but not by the standards of other parts of the world. Here are
some figures for the EU, from
<http://www.ers.usda.gov/briefing/EuropeanUnion/basicinfo.htm>

"EU farms are, on average, considerably smaller than U.S. farms. In 2007,
the average farm size in the EU-15 was 46.2 acres, whereas the average farm
size in the United States was 418 acres. The addition of 12 new member
states with smaller farm sizes than the EU-15 makes U.S. average farm size
more than 12 times that of the average EU-27 farm of 34.1 acres. However,
farm size varies greatly by country, ranging from an average of 171 acres in
the United Kingdom to 7.2 acres in Hungary."

It's very interesting to see people working on these tiny little farms in
Eastern Europe and elsewhere because it's such small scale. Africa and Asia
are even smaller.

B


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