Cen V1 (2-24) Idaho State and County Data Volume 1 • Geographic Area Series • Part 12 AC-22-A-12 Issued February 2024 United States Department of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, Secretary National Agricultural Statistics Service Hubert Hamer, Administrator Acknowledgments The U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) conducted the 2022 Census of Agriculture, analyzed the data, and prepared this and other reports. The census provides a comprehensive picture of U.S. agriculture in 2022, and NASS recognizes and appreciates that many individuals and organizations contributed to the effort. Most importantly, the success of the agriculture census depends directly on the cooperation of farmers and ranchers across the country. Agricultural producers took the time to provide the information requested, recognizing that participating in the census is their responsibility and gives them a voice in their future. We are grateful to every producer who participated in the 2022 census. Also essential were the many partners who communicated about the census and encouraged producers to respond. Farm organizations, stakeholder groups, agriculture media, community-based organizations, and land grant and other universities helped build awareness of the census and its importance to producers, their communities, and U.S. agriculture as a whole. We appreciate their help in reaching all kinds of agricultural operations, thereby ensuring a comprehensive census. Various USDA agencies and State departments of agriculture provided valuable advice during the planning, data collection, and processing phases of the census, as well as critical assistance at the local level to farmers and ranchers completing census forms. Our thanks to them and to the enumerators who collected data locally through NASS' cooperative agreement with the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture. Members of the Advisory Committee on Agriculture Statistics offered advice on census questions, as well as their strong and consistent support and thoughtful recommendations for census and other programs. Representatives of public and private organizations provided input as well. Finally, we acknowledge and appreciate the support services of the U.S. Department of Commerce National Processing Center in Jeffersonville, IN. To learn more about the census of agriculture, visit www.nass.usda.gov/AgCensus, where you can access new and historic data in a variety of formats, including the Quick Stats database. To learn about other NASS reports and activities, visit www.nass.usda.gov. For additional information, contact NASS Customer Service through email (nass@usda.gov) or phone (800-727-9540). In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the responsible Agency or USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877- 8339. Additionally, program information may be made available in languages other than English. To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD-3027, found online at How to File a Program Discrimination Complaint and at any USDA office or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in the letter all of the information requested in the form. To request a copy of the complaint form, call (866) 632-9992. Submit your completed form or letter to USDA by: (1) mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, D.C. 20250-9410; (2) fax: (202) 690- 7442; or (3) email: . USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender. Introduction HISTORY The 2022 Census of Agriculture is the 30th Federal census of agriculture and the sixth conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). The U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census conducted the census of agriculture for 156 years (1840- 1996). The 1997 Appropriations Act contained a provision that transferred the responsibility for the census of agriculture to NASS. The history of collecting data on U.S. agriculture dates back as far as President George Washington, who kept meticulous statistical records describing his own and other farms. In 1791, President Washington wrote to farmers requesting information on land values, crop acreages, crop yields, livestock prices, and taxes. Washington compiled the results on an area extending roughly 250 miles from north to south and 100 miles from east to west which today lies in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia, where most of the young country's population lived. In effect, Washington's inquiry was an attempt to fulfill the need for sound agricultural data for a nation that was heavily reliant on the success of agriculture. Such informal inquiries worked while the Nation was young, but were insufficient as the country expanded. In 1839, Congress appropriated $1,000 for "carrying out agricultural investigations, and procuring agricultural statistics." The first agriculture census was taken in 1840 as part of the sixth decennial census of population. As the country expanded and agriculture evolved, the decade between agriculture censuses became too long an interval to capture the changes in agricultural production. After the 1920 census, the census interval was changed to every five years resulting in a separate, mid-decade census of agriculture that was conducted in 1925, 1935, and 1945. The agriculture census continued as part of the decennial census through 1950. From 1954 to 1974, the census was taken for the years ending in 4 and 9. In 1976, Congress authorized the census of agriculture for 1978 and 1982 to adjust the data reference year so it coincided with other economic censuses. This adjustment in timing established the census of agriculture on a 5-year cycle collecting data for years ending in 2 and 7. USES OF CENSUS DATA The census of agriculture provides a detailed picture of U.S. farms and ranches every five years. It is the leading source of uniform, comprehensive agricultural data for every State and county or county equivalent. Census of agriculture data are routinely used by agriculture organizations, businesses, State departments of agriculture, elected representatives, and legislative bodies at all levels of government, public and private sector analysts, the news media, and colleges and universities. census of agriculture data are frequently used to: • Show the importance and value of agriculture at the county, State, and national levels; • Provide agricultural news media and agricultural associations benchmark statistics for stories and articles on U.S. agriculture and the foods produced; • Compare the income and costs of production; • Provide important data about the demographics and financial well-being of producers; • Evaluate historical agricultural trends to formulate farm and rural policies and develop programs that help agricultural producers; • Allocate local and national funds for farm programs, e.g. extension service projects, agricultural research, soil conservation programs, and land-grant colleges and universities; • Identify the assets needed to support agricultural production such as land, buildings, machinery, and other equipment; • Create an extensive database of information on uncommon crops and livestock and the value of those commodities for assessing the need to develop policies and programs to support those commodities; • Provide geographic data on production so agribusinesses will locate near major production areas for efficiencies for both producers and agribusinesses; • Measure the usage of modern technologies such as conservation practices, organic production, renewable energy systems, internet access, and specialized marketing strategies; • Develop new and improved methods to increase agricultural production and profitability; • Plan for operations during drought and emergency outbreaks of diseases or infestations of pests; • Analyze and report the current state of food, fuel, and fiber production in the United States; and • Make energy projections and forecast needs for agricultural producers and their communities. LEGAL AUTHORITY The 2022 Census of Agriculture is required by law under the "Census of Agriculture Act of 1997," Public Law 105- 113 (Title 7, United States Code, Section 2204g). The law directs the Secretary of Agriculture to conduct a census of agriculture every fifth year. The census of agriculture includes every State, Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. FARM DEFINITION The agriculture census definition of a farm is any place from which $1,000 or more of agricultural products were produced and sold, or normally would have been sold, during the census year. The definition has changed nine times since it was established in 1850. The current definition was first used for the 1974 Census of Agriculture and was used in each subsequent census of agriculture. This definition is consistent with the definition used for current USDA surveys. The farm definition used for each U.S. territory varies. The report for each territory includes a discussion of its farm definition. DATA COMPARABILITY Most commodity data are comparable between the 2022 and 2017 censuses. Changes were made to the 2022 census that affect the comparability for some data items. Demographic data for the 2022 Census of Agriculture are not fully comparable to 2017 and earlier census data due to terminology and definition changes. Dollar figures are expressed in current dollars and have not been adjusted for inflation or deflation. In general, data for censuses since 1974 are not fully comparable with data for 1969 and earlier censuses due to changes in the farm definition. See Appendix B, General Explanation and Census of Agriculture Report Form, Data Changes for a detailed discussion of these changes. REFERENCE PERIOD Reference periods for the 2022 Census of Agriculture were similar to those used in the 2017 Census of Agriculture. Reference periods used were: • Crop production is measured for the calendar year, except for a few crops such as avocados, citrus, and olives for which the production year overlaps the calendar year. See Appendix B, General Explanation and Census of Agriculture Report Form for details. • Livestock, poultry, machinery and equipment inventories, and market value of land and buildings are measured as of December 31 of the census year. • Crop and livestock sales, other farm-related income, direct sales income, income from federal farm programs, Commodity Credit Corporation loans, Conservation Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, Conservation Reserve Enhancement, and Wetlands Reserve Program participation, farm expenses, chemical and fertilizer use, irrigated acreage, and hired farm labor data are measured for the calendar year. TABLES AND APPENDICES Chapter 1. Table 1 shows State-level historical data through the 1992 census and tables 2 through 51 show detailed State-level data usually accompanied by historical data from the 2017 census. Tables 52 through 70 show detailed producer and farm operation data compared to the previous census when applicable. Tables 71 through 77 show detailed State-level data cross- tabulated by several categories for the 2022 census only. Chapter 2. County-level data are presented in 57 tables in 2 different table formats - county and county summary. Most tables include 2017 historical data. County tables include general data for all counties within the State. The county names are listed in alphabetical order in the column headings. County summary tables provide comprehensive data for all counties reporting a data item. Appendix A. Provides information about data collection and data processing activities and discusses the statistical methodology used in conducting and evaluating the census. Table A summarizes coverage, nonresponse, and misclassification adjustment for selected items for the United States. Table B provides reliability estimates of U.S. totals for selected items. Table C summarizes coverage, nonresponse, and misclassification adjustment for selected items at the State/county level. Table D provides total number of American Indian or Alaska Native farm producers both on and off reservations by State. Appendix B. Includes definitions of specific terms and phrases used in this publication, including items in the publication tables that carry the note "see text." It also provides facsimiles of the report form and instruction sheet used to collect data. RESPONDENT CONFIDENTIALITY In keeping with the provisions of Title 7 of the United States Code, no data are published that would disclose information about the operations of an individual farm or ranch. All tabulated data are subjected to an extensive disclosure review prior to publication. Any tabulated item that identifies data reported by a respondent or allows a respondent's data to be accurately estimated or derived, was suppressed and coded with a 'D'. However, the number of farms reporting an item is not considered confidential information and is provided even though other information is withheld. SPECIAL EFFORTS DIRECTED AT MINORITIES NASS implemented several activities to improve coverage of minority farm producers. These activities included, but were not limited to: • Obtaining mail lists from organizations likely to contain names and addresses of historically underserved farm producers; • Conducting pre-census promotion activities that targeted historically underserved audiences including women, American Indian and Alaska Native, Asian, Black and African American, and Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin farm producers. SPECIAL STUDIES AND CUSTOM TABULATIONS Special studies such as the 2023 Irrigation and Water Management Survey and the 2023 Census of Aquaculture are part of the census program and provide supplemental information to the 2022 Census of Agriculture in the respective subject area. Results are published on the internet. Custom-designed tabulations may be developed when data are not published elsewhere. These tabulations are developed to individual user specifications on a cost reimbursable basis and shared with the public. Quick Stats, NASS's online database that allows data users to build customized queries, should be investigated before requesting a custom tabulation. All special tabulations are subject to a thorough disclosure review prior to release to prevent the disclosure of any individual respondent data. Instructions to request a special tabulation can be found on the NASS website, including information about timing, fees, and the submission form. Questions can be directed to SM.NASS.Data.Lab@usda.gov. ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS The following abbreviations and symbols are used throughout the tables: - Represents zero. (D) Withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual farms. (H) Coefficient of variation is greater than or equal to 99.95 percent or the standard error is greater than or equal to 99.95 percent of mean. (IC) Independent city. (L) Coefficient of variation is less than 0.05 percent or the standard error is less than 0.05 percent of the mean. (NA) Not available. (X) Not applicable. (Z) Less than half of the unit shown. cwt Hundredweight. sq ft Square feet. Table 1. Historical Highlights: 2022 and Earlier Census Years [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Not adjusted for coverage : : : : : : :--------------------------------- All farms : 2022 : 2017 : 2012 : 2007 : 2002 : 1997 : 1997 : 1992 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ...........................................number: 22,877 24,996 24,816 25,349 25,017 25,590 22,314 22,124 Land in farms ....................................acres: 11,547,963 11,691,912 11,760,109 11,497,383 11,767,294 12,057,001 11,830,167 13,468,992 Average size of farm .........................acres: 505 468 474 454 470 471 530 609 : Estimated market value of land and buildings 1/: : Average per farm ...........................dollars: 2,124,863 1,340,738 1,052,941 894,497 613,303 487,885 536,521 410,206 Average per acre ...........................dollars: 4,209 2,866 2,222 1,972 1,270 1,035 1,017 682 : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment 1/ ...............................$1,000: 4,930,153 4,397,906 3,569,402 2,899,269 2,071,614 1,847,075 1,740,107 1,496,916 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 215,507 175,951 143,835 114,383 91,746 72,191 77,916 67,841 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres ........................................: 5,785 6,673 4,861 4,891 4,871 4,320 3,092 2,785 10 to 49 acres ......................................: 6,977 7,337 7,031 7,497 7,439 6,857 5,621 5,017 50 to 179 acres .....................................: 3,901 4,161 5,103 5,225 4,917 5,294 4,757 5,070 180 to 499 acres ....................................: 2,515 2,786 3,575 3,445 3,279 4,016 3,812 4,182 500 to 999 acres ....................................: 1,384 1,606 1,728 1,808 1,873 2,243 2,199 2,270 1,000 to 1,999 acres ................................: 1,048 1,160 1,308 1,214 1,346 1,604 1,582 1,524 2,000 acres or more .................................: 1,267 1,273 1,210 1,269 1,292 1,256 1,251 1,276 : Total cropland ...................................farms: 15,823 17,338 18,024 18,782 18,366 20,485 18,994 19,204 acres: 5,623,516 5,894,676 5,793,347 5,918,899 6,152,611 6,435,446 6,308,877 6,301,862 Harvested cropland..............................farms: 13,037 15,028 15,104 13,975 13,444 16,388 15,494 16,023 acres: 4,370,363 4,576,077 4,504,676 4,225,786 4,313,288 4,581,227 4,478,862 4,225,273 Irrigated land ...................................farms: 14,191 15,597 15,732 16,124 15,901 16,683 15,191 15,487 acres: 3,167,499 3,398,266 3,365,292 3,299,889 3,288,522 3,543,805 3,493,542 3,260,006 : Market value of agricultural : products sold ..................................$1,000: 10,892,201 7,567,439 7,801,446 5,688,765 3,908,262 3,388,296 3,345,864 2,964,216 Average per farm ...........................dollars: 476,120 302,746 314,372 224,418 156,224 132,407 149,945 133,982 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse : crops ........................................$1,000: 4,764,793 3,210,834 3,443,012 2,324,789 1,787,172 1,816,769 1,773,699 1,492,103 Livestock, poultry, and their products ........$1,000: 6,127,408 4,356,606 4,358,435 3,363,976 2,121,090 1,571,526 1,572,166 1,472,113 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 ....................................: 9,048 10,205 8,969 10,772 11,587 8,016 5,663 4,726 $2,500 to $4,999 ....................................: 2,135 2,475 2,487 2,192 2,123 2,790 2,350 2,186 $5,000 to $9,999 ....................................: 2,284 2,358 2,367 2,281 1,998 2,636 2,362 2,433 $10,000 to $24,999 ..................................: 2,179 2,452 2,537 2,617 2,444 3,240 3,182 3,266 $25,000 to $49,999 ..................................: 1,451 1,538 1,842 1,666 1,604 2,131 2,068 2,370 $50,000 to $99,999 ..................................: 1,220 1,381 1,518 1,505 1,368 1,939 1,898 2,253 $100,000 to $499,999 ................................: 2,471 2,777 3,095 2,661 2,589 3,533 3,510 3,790 $500,000 or more ....................................: 2,089 1,810 2,001 1,655 1,304 1,305 1,281 1,100 : Farms by legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual ................................: 18,427 20,633 20,716 21,308 22,041 21,669 18,631 18,534 Partnership .........................................: 1,752 1,869 1,802 2,124 1,543 2,089 1,956 2,074 Corporation .........................................: 2,145 1,882 1,792 1,533 1,218 1,523 1,459 1,287 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : association, American Indian Reservation, etc. .....: 553 612 506 384 215 309 268 229 : Total farm production expenses 1/ ...............$1,000: 9,317,904 6,651,559 6,642,131 4,604,040 3,440,579 2,758,962 2,705,028 2,445,017 : Selected farm production expenses 1/: : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased .....$1,000: 722,700 616,455 633,046 584,795 616,224 470,769 469,600 527,312 Feed purchased ............................... $1,000: 2,598,813 1,794,336 1,921,092 1,137,906 646,250 451,913 450,829 347,903 Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased 2/ .................................$1,000: 765,559 506,953 593,119 370,237 202,192 252,241 245,440 190,698 Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...........$1,000: 395,457 248,007 318,433 220,007 109,251 103,631 100,076 95,329 Hired farm labor ..............................$1,000: 1,043,118 735,969 592,484 499,505 369,892 278,162 270,843 245,990 Interest expense ..............................$1,000: 286,045 253,583 233,928 220,279 192,730 183,432 178,482 157,683 Chemicals purchased ...........................$1,000: 410,258 286,983 267,849 160,030 120,830 122,359 118,406 82,374 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory ....................farms: 8,956 10,076 10,957 10,621 10,902 13,317 12,063 12,527 number: 2,517,987 2,435,137 2,397,541 2,236,147 1,989,548 1,862,639 1,908,097 1,812,720 Beef cows ....................................farms: 7,379 8,149 8,336 7,365 7,902 8,966 8,405 8,393 number: 449,249 497,984 485,025 476,292 502,024 531,661 555,676 565,016 Milk cows ....................................farms: 549 785 934 811 982 1,504 1,404 1,990 number: 664,479 603,817 578,761 536,463 390,600 265,038 265,854 181,785 Cattle and calves sold .........................farms: 7,630 8,757 9,157 9,662 9,035 12,516 11,684 12,230 number: 1,835,062 1,870,607 1,838,956 1,829,456 1,856,342 1,567,003 1,578,375 1,646,112 Hogs and pigs inventory ........................farms: 562 606 680 657 841 917 714 1,141 number: 21,157 35,634 (D) 32,794 23,352 33,875 29,026 67,343 Hogs and pigs sold .............................farms: 663 699 683 728 980 729 573 940 number: 100,260 105,161 144,932 65,618 39,482 52,023 44,626 104,723 Layers inventory ...............................farms: 3,514 3,579 3,005 1,610 1,318 (NA) (NA) (NA) number: 638,424 472,192 655,346 (D) 907,873 (NA) (NA) (NA) Broilers and other meat-type chickens : sold ..........................................farms: 155 213 202 125 131 71 55 59 number: 11,815 17,852 10,053 7,937 7,475 7,743 6,043 27,206 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain .................................farms: 648 713 965 691 462 705 694 (NA) acres: 126,508 143,263 135,010 104,570 42,209 41,369 41,162 (NA) bushels: 22,937,258 27,925,762 26,226,728 17,752,526 6,561,733 6,429,983 6,390,279 (NA) Corn for silage or greenchop ...................farms: 772 1,031 1,077 1,115 1,021 1,053 1,041 (NA) acres: 258,326 275,136 232,143 211,748 134,133 80,983 79,086 (NA) tons: 7,412,427 8,047,967 6,320,137 5,695,090 3,490,255 2,044,572 1,991,808 (NA) Wheat for grain, all ...........................farms: 2,210 2,585 3,145 2,850 2,736 5,381 5,199 6,106 acres: 1,162,597 1,182,797 1,250,494 1,191,086 1,201,942 1,458,097 1,410,978 1,384,893 bushels: 93,723,621 94,183,336 96,837,345 84,614,401 78,507,447 112,491,692 108,941,849 94,094,326 Durum wheat for grain ........................farms: 50 82 17 32 29 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 10,250 23,590 12,517 14,485 8,434 (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 801,586 1,914,309 767,326 1,166,722 620,629 (NA) (NA) (NA) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 1. Historical Highlights: 2022 and Earlier Census Years (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Not adjusted for coverage : : : : : : :--------------------------------- All farms : 2022 : 2017 : 2012 : 2007 : 2002 : 1997 : 1997 : 1992 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : Wheat for grain, all - Con. : : Other spring wheat for grain .................farms: 918 1,301 1,604 1,423 1,505 2,797 2,708 (NA) acres: 365,898 438,899 499,623 446,897 518,218 581,392 567,369 (NA) bushels: 25,659,376 34,495,375 36,302,985 30,456,106 30,244,525 46,213,277 45,270,813 (NA) Winter wheat for grain .......................farms: 1,706 1,775 2,222 2,059 1,923 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 786,449 720,308 738,354 729,704 675,290 (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 67,262,659 57,773,652 59,767,034 52,991,573 47,642,293 (NA) (NA) (NA) Oats for grain .................................farms: 115 124 265 298 393 547 549 (NA) acres: 11,088 10,416 14,899 19,629 18,179 20,701 20,406 (NA) bushels: 704,503 661,344 1,078,637 1,178,663 1,244,462 1,500,159 1,472,775 (NA) Barley for grain ...............................farms: 1,322 1,669 2,347 2,146 2,447 4,259 4,178 5,149 acres: 538,586 524,307 593,469 547,928 634,476 736,771 711,504 691,273 bushels: 50,782,418 50,452,071 51,147,054 42,464,856 47,865,297 56,147,263 54,317,070 48,647,384 : Sorghum for grain ..............................farms: 5 6 3 - 1 1 2 (NA) acres: 485 469 26 - (D) (D) (D) (NA) bushels: 52,100 43,610 2,306 - (D) (D) (D) (NA) Sorghum for silage or greenchop ................farms: 5 21 8 3 2 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 2,082 1,559 1,117 170 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) tons: 39,562 22,489 22,046 2,070 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Soybeans for beans .............................farms: 8 2 - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 304 (D) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) bushels: 9,092 (D) - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas .....................................farms: 227 506 947 641 762 1,188 1,138 (NA) acres: 35,063 69,020 140,472 88,987 79,791 95,409 92,743 (NA) cwt: 868,671 1,757,790 2,878,053 1,646,970 1,665,528 2,090,601 2,036,315 (NA) : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ...................farms: 10,279 12,276 11,930 11,159 10,949 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 1,415,865 1,509,295 1,376,632 1,316,296 1,335,171 (NA) (NA) (NA) tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 5,833,186 5,041,850 5,198,288 4,856,156 (NA) (NA) (NA) Sunflower seed, all ............................farms: 10 3 3 1 3 (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 938 (D) 140 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) pounds: 1,500,019 454,518 7,960 (D) (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) Sugarbeets for sugar ...........................farms: 452 460 531 507 655 926 921 (NA) acres: 178,358 168,376 184,510 163,598 202,932 195,869 195,651 (NA) tons: 6,570,132 6,521,838 6,474,139 5,631,170 4,934,966 5,084,196 5,078,013 (NA) : Vegetables harvested for sale 4/ ...............farms: 1,235 1,209 1,307 1,137 427 674 645 (NA) acres: 337,060 354,278 369,480 377,062 26,010 38,695 37,783 (NA) Potatoes .....................................farms: 529 684 794 703 818 1,435 1,402 1,616 acres: 301,157 335,042 345,217 350,905 364,229 398,498 394,977 372,028 Sweet potatoes ...............................farms: 10 - - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) acres: 1 - - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) Land in orchards 5/ ............................farms: 567 576 482 485 442 429 377 (NA) acres: 5,523 5,708 6,529 7,682 7,172 10,660 9,903 (NA) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data for 2002 and prior years are based on a sample of farms. 2/ Data for 1997 and prior years exclude cost of lime and manure. 3/ Data for 2017 and prior years exclude sugarcane for seed. 4/ Data for 2002 and prior years exclude potatoes, sweet potatoes, and ginseng. 5/ Data for 2012 and prior years exclude pineapples. Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Landlord's Share, Food Marketing Practices, and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Percent of : Item : 2022 : total in 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS SOLD : : Total sales ...............................................................farms: 22,877 100.0 24,996 $1,000: 10,892,201 100.0 7,567,439 Average per farm ....................................................dollars: 476,120 (X) 302,746 : By value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................................farms: 6,418 28.1 7,412 $1,000: 663 (Z) 1,459 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................................farms: 2,630 11.5 2,793 $1,000: 4,344 (Z) 4,577 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................................farms: 2,135 9.3 2,475 $1,000: 7,640 0.1 8,874 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................................farms: 2,284 10.0 2,358 $1,000: 15,832 0.1 16,372 $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................................farms: 1,726 7.5 1,883 $1,000: 24,274 0.2 26,423 : $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................................farms: 453 2.0 569 $1,000: 10,023 0.1 12,583 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................................farms: 1,030 4.5 1,140 $1,000: 32,550 0.3 35,702 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................................farms: 421 1.8 398 $1,000: 18,602 0.2 17,687 $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................................farms: 1,220 5.3 1,381 $1,000: 86,286 0.8 96,756 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................................farms: 1,392 6.1 1,635 $1,000: 224,272 2.1 260,609 : $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................................farms: 1,079 4.7 1,142 $1,000: 385,349 3.5 406,615 $500,000 to $999,999 ..................................................farms: 761 3.3 740 $1,000: 544,075 5.0 513,855 $1,000,000 or more ...................................................farms: 1,328 5.8 1,070 $1,000: 9,538,291 87.6 6,165,926 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ............................................farms: 613 2.7 571 $1,000: 957,046 8.8 858,036 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ............................................farms: 368 1.6 256 $1,000: 1,298,990 11.9 869,244 $5,000,000 or more ..................................................farms: 347 1.5 243 $1,000: 7,282,255 66.9 4,438,646 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops .........................farms: 10,455 45.7 12,384 $1,000: 4,764,793 43.7 3,210,834 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ...........................farms: 3,530 15.4 4,338 $1,000: 1,626,831 14.9 1,049,101 Corn ..............................................................farms: 1,117 4.9 1,380 $1,000: 405,868 3.7 280,789 Wheat .............................................................farms: 2,203 9.6 2,584 $1,000: 744,115 6.8 411,336 Soybeans ..........................................................farms: 8 (Z) 2 $1,000: 135 (Z) (D) Sorghum ...........................................................farms: 6 (Z) 20 $1,000: 337 (Z) (D) : Barley ............................................................farms: 1,319 5.8 1,667 $1,000: 349,414 3.2 231,931 Rice ..............................................................farms: - - - $1,000: - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ...................farms: 771 3.4 1,158 $1,000: 126,961 1.2 124,410 : Tobacco .............................................................farms: - - - $1,000: - - - : Cotton and cottonseed ...............................................farms: - - - $1,000: - - - : Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet potatoes ....................farms: 1,231 5.4 1,355 $1,000: 1,597,035 14.7 1,147,097 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ......................................farms: 561 2.5 532 $1,000: 31,693 0.3 25,122 Fruits and tree nuts ..............................................farms: 446 1.9 413 $1,000: 29,683 0.3 24,111 Berries ...........................................................farms: 234 1.0 220 $1,000: 2,010 (Z) 1,011 : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ..........................farms: 599 2.6 491 $1,000: 122,254 1.1 66,449 : Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops ...............................................farms: 47 0.2 52 $1,000: 673 (Z) 707 Cultivated Christmas trees ........................................farms: 47 0.2 50 $1,000: 673 (Z) (D) Short rotation woody crops ........................................farms: - - 2 $1,000: - - (D) : Other crops and hay .................................................farms: 7,813 34.2 9,671 $1,000: 1,386,308 12.7 922,356 Maple syrup .......................................................farms: - - - $1,000: - - - : Livestock, poultry, and their products ................................farms: 10,666 46.6 12,305 $1,000: 6,127,408 56.3 4,356,606 Poultry and eggs ....................................................farms: 1,751 7.7 1,990 $1,000: 40,298 0.4 29,828 Cattle and calves ...................................................farms: 7,630 33.4 8,757 $1,000: 2,175,548 20.0 1,787,255 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Landlord's Share, Food Marketing Practices, and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Percent of : Item : 2022 : total in 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Livestock, poultry, and their products - Con. : : Milk from cows ......................................................farms: 330 1.4 491 $1,000: 3,727,378 34.2 2,330,865 Hogs and pigs .......................................................farms: 663 2.9 699 $1,000: 23,779 0.2 18,100 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk ................................farms: 1,454 6.4 1,784 $1,000: 46,709 0.4 42,708 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and donkeys ..........................farms: 1,028 4.5 1,495 $1,000: 12,951 0.1 12,504 Aquaculture .........................................................farms: 51 0.2 69 $1,000: 76,464 0.7 97,817 : Other animals and other animal : products (see text) ................................................farms: 585 2.6 582 $1,000: 24,281 0.2 37,530 : LANDLORD'S SHARE OF TOTAL SALES : : Value of landlord's share of total sales ..................................farms: 719 3.1 1,031 $1,000: 99,099 0.9 57,465 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to consumers ..................................farms: 1,499 6.6 1,765 $1,000: 20,984 0.2 28,001 Average per farm ....................................................dollars: 13,999 (X) 15,865 : By value of sales: : $1 to $499 ............................................................farms: 375 1.6 480 $1,000: 74 (Z) 101 $500 to $999 ..........................................................farms: 168 0.7 226 $1,000: 111 (Z) 147 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................................farms: 511 2.2 646 $1,000: 1,228 (Z) 1,540 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................................farms: 184 0.8 205 $1,000: 1,194 (Z) 1,439 $10,000 to $24,999 ....................................................farms: 153 0.7 110 $1,000: 2,260 (Z) 1,576 : $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................................farms: 40 0.2 45 $1,000: 1,357 (Z) 1,516 $50,000 or more .......................................................farms: 68 0.3 53 $1,000: 14,761 0.1 21,682 : Value of food sold directly to retail markets, : institutions, and food hubs for local or : regionally branded products ..............................................farms: 638 2.8 281 $1,000: 57,669 0.5 85,547 Average per farm ....................................................dollars: 90,391 (X) 304,438 : By value of sales: : $1 to $499 ............................................................farms: 52 0.2 52 $1,000: 14 (Z) 11 $500 to $999 ..........................................................farms: 34 0.1 28 $1,000: 22 (Z) 22 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................................farms: 205 0.9 79 $1,000: 447 (Z) 202 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................................farms: 96 0.4 19 $1,000: 645 (Z) 128 $10,000 to $24,999 ....................................................farms: 67 0.3 26 $1,000: 1,007 (Z) 411 : $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................................farms: 47 0.2 23 $1,000: 1,564 (Z) 837 $50,000 or more ......................................................farms: 137 0.6 54 $1,000: 53,971 0.5 83,937 : VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS SOLD : : Value of processed or value-added agricultural : products sold ............................................................farms: 432 1.9 365 $1,000: 13,950 0.1 13,479 Average per farm ....................................................dollars: 32,291 (X) 36,928 : By value of sales: : $1 to $499 ............................................................farms: 107 0.5 99 $1,000: 19 (Z) 14 $500 to $999 ..........................................................farms: 49 0.2 48 $1,000: 30 (Z) 31 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................................farms: 129 0.6 107 $1,000: 306 (Z) 259 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................................farms: 55 0.2 42 $1,000: 374 (Z) 295 $10,000 to $24,999 ....................................................farms: 35 0.2 16 $1,000: 571 (Z) 221 : $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................................farms: 23 0.1 14 $1,000: 740 (Z) 499 $50,000 or more ......................................................farms: 34 0.1 39 $1,000: 11,909 0.1 12,160 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 3. Economic Class of Farms by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold and Government Payments: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Market value of : : : Market value of : : : agricultural : Market value of : : agricultural : Market value of : : products sold and : agricultural : Government : products sold and : agricultural : Government Item :government payments : products sold : payments :government payments : products sold : payments ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total .................................................farms: 22,877 22,877 4,296 24,996 24,996 6,083 $1,000: 11,024,607 10,892,201 132,405 7,697,044 7,567,439 129,605 Average per farm ................................dollars: 481,908 476,120 30,821 307,931 302,746 21,306 : By economic class: : : Less than $1,000 ..................................farms: 5,317 5,317 158 6,379 6,379 131 $1,000: 731 651 80 1,480 1,413 67 $1,000 to $2,499 ..................................farms: 2,873 2,873 307 2,927 2,927 265 $1,000: 4,767 4,266 501 4,811 4,443 368 $2,500 to $4,999 ..................................farms: 2,357 2,357 292 2,631 2,631 307 $1,000: 8,447 7,508 939 9,445 8,600 845 $5,000 to $9,999 ..................................farms: 2,526 2,526 341 2,572 2,572 392 $1,000: 17,510 15,654 1,856 17,916 15,974 1,942 $10,000 to $24,999 ................................farms: 2,368 2,368 436 2,622 2,622 574 $1,000: 37,567 33,385 4,182 41,793 37,253 4,539 : $25,000 to $49,999 ................................farms: 1,551 1,551 385 1,651 1,651 570 $1,000: 55,116 49,738 5,378 57,676 50,994 6,682 $50,000 to $99,999 ................................farms: 1,228 1,228 300 1,471 1,471 705 $1,000: 86,145 82,044 4,101 103,641 92,361 11,281 $100,000 to $249,999 ..............................farms: 1,415 1,415 546 1,700 1,700 987 $1,000: 228,094 215,429 12,665 271,057 251,087 19,969 $250,000 to $499,999 ..............................farms: 1,102 1,102 441 1,169 1,169 803 $1,000: 393,956 378,154 15,802 416,056 396,921 19,135 $500,000 to $999,999 ..............................farms: 778 778 387 782 782 584 $1,000: 556,578 536,073 20,505 543,744 522,241 21,503 : $1,000,000 or more ................................farms: 1,362 1,362 703 1,092 1,092 765 $1,000: 9,635,695 9,569,298 66,397 6,229,425 6,186,152 43,274 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ........................farms: 639 639 332 588 588 444 $1,000: 998,527 969,092 29,435 888,416 866,131 22,286 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ........................farms: 373 373 175 259 259 175 $1,000: 1,317,492 1,303,748 13,743 881,263 871,518 9,746 $5,000,000 or more ..............................farms: 350 350 196 245 245 146 $1,000: 7,319,676 7,296,457 23,219 4,459,745 4,448,503 11,242 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses 1/ ...............................farms: 22,877 (X) 24,996 (X) $1,000: (X) 9,317,904 (X) 6,651,559 Average per farm ..........................................dollars: (X) 407,304 (X) 266,105 : Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 .....................................................: 4,105 11,813 6,031 16,650 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 4,161 30,420 4,631 33,639 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 5,391 86,640 5,419 85,723 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 2,929 102,578 2,710 96,166 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................................: 1,744 122,600 1,755 123,670 : $100,000 to $249,999 .............................................: 1,773 287,844 1,732 273,691 $250,000 to $499,999 .............................................: 929 331,520 1,076 378,720 $500,000 or more .................................................: 1,845 8,344,490 1,642 5,643,299 $500,000 to $999,999 ...........................................: 648 457,458 739 523,747 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .......................................: 655 1,020,333 504 785,357 $2,500,000 or more .............................................: 542 6,866,699 399 4,334,195 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners purchased .............farms: 9,896 (X) 11,728 (X) $1,000: (X) 765,559 (X) 506,953 percent of total: (X) 8.2 (X) 7.6 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .....................................................: 2,422 518 3,623 723 $500 to $999 ...................................................: 1,031 689 1,261 841 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 2,204 5,127 2,497 5,639 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 874 6,019 859 5,823 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 799 12,474 1,152 18,753 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 636 21,988 701 24,506 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 575 39,719 652 45,784 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 1,355 679,025 983 404,883 : Chemicals purchased ...........................................farms: 10,419 (X) 12,014 (X) $1,000: (X) 410,258 (X) 286,983 percent of total: (X) 4.4 (X) 4.3 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .....................................................: 4,157 808 5,883 1,025 $500 to $999 ...................................................: 1,231 771 1,144 747 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 1,956 4,285 1,900 4,319 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 667 4,407 736 4,947 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 777 12,263 870 13,555 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 523 18,199 511 17,846 $50,000 or more ................................................: 1,108 369,526 970 244,545 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 382 26,615 382 25,950 $100,000 or more .............................................: 726 342,911 588 218,595 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .....................farms: 7,732 (X) 7,763 (X) $1,000: (X) 378,944 (X) 269,331 percent of total: (X) 4.1 (X) 4.0 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .....................................................: 1,670 348 1,881 373 $500 to $999 ...................................................: 852 566 778 512 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 1,881 4,332 1,771 4,318 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 642 4,365 809 5,614 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 960 15,507 898 14,372 $25,000 or more ................................................: 1,727 353,826 1,626 244,143 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 515 17,457 615 21,220 $50,000 or more ..............................................: 1,212 336,369 1,011 222,922 : Cover crop seed purchased ...................................farms: 1,065 (X) 935 (X) $1,000: (X) 4,094 (X) 2,719 percent of total: (X) (Z) (X) (Z) Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 ...................................................: 411 65 398 68 $500 to $999 .................................................: 180 119 142 93 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 276 594 270 582 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 76 514 60 415 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 80 1,126 45 651 $25,000 or more ..............................................: 42 1,678 20 910 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 35 1,128 14 494 $50,000 or more ............................................: 7 550 6 416 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased .....................farms: 6,503 (X) 7,526 (X) $1,000: (X) 722,700 (X) 616,455 percent of total: (X) 7.8 (X) 9.3 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 1,680 606 2,051 723 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 2,516 6,387 2,975 7,070 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 779 5,220 975 6,502 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 723 11,031 714 10,872 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 317 10,399 327 11,175 : $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 159 11,265 198 13,772 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................................: 140 23,314 130 19,973 $250,000 or more ...............................................: 189 654,478 156 546,368 $250,000 to $499,999 .........................................: 77 26,500 58 20,504 $500,000 to $999,999 .........................................: 40 27,525 47 31,319 $1,000,000 or more ...........................................: 72 600,453 51 494,544 : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ......................farms: 3,243 (X) 4,311 (X) $1,000: (X) 121,882 (X) 114,900 percent of total: (X) 1.3 (X) 1.7 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 596 240 926 360 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 1,238 3,175 1,714 4,243 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 427 2,848 693 4,537 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 473 7,045 474 7,027 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 244 7,852 254 8,660 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased - Con. : Breeding livestock purchased or leased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 106 7,324 129 8,358 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................................: 76 12,595 70 10,603 $250,000 or more .............................................: 83 80,804 51 71,112 $250,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 45 15,330 19 6,198 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 22 13,952 11 7,944 $1,000,000 or more .........................................: 16 51,522 21 56,969 : Other livestock and poultry purchased : or leased ..................................................farms: 4,301 (X) 4,506 (X) $1,000: (X) 600,818 (X) 501,555 percent of total: (X) 6.4 (X) 7.5 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 1,575 525 1,932 606 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 1,657 3,940 1,557 3,398 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 410 2,739 392 2,646 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 294 4,413 282 4,334 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 102 3,413 91 3,222 : $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 85 5,760 77 5,594 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................................: 70 11,286 64 9,797 $250,000 or more .............................................: 108 568,741 111 471,957 $250,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 34 11,558 41 14,422 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 23 17,550 36 21,589 $1,000,000 or more .........................................: 51 539,633 34 435,946 : Feed purchased ................................................farms: 13,525 (X) 15,186 (X) $1,000: (X) 2,598,813 (X) 1,794,336 percent of total: (X) 27.9 (X) 27.0 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 2,981 1,411 4,995 2,216 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 5,406 13,287 6,129 13,975 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 2,059 13,928 1,631 10,572 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,562 22,843 1,078 16,279 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 619 21,910 390 13,292 : $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 293 19,498 293 20,623 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 605 2,505,934 670 1,717,378 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................................: 207 31,093 283 42,692 $250,000 to $499,999 .........................................: 100 36,010 111 37,952 $500,000 to $999,999 .........................................: 75 54,628 69 49,606 $1,000,000 or more ...........................................: 223 2,384,203 207 1,587,128 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...........................farms: 21,557 (X) 23,333 (X) $1,000: (X) 395,457 (X) 248,007 percent of total: (X) 4.2 (X) 3.7 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 8,980 3,232 11,748 3,911 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 6,701 14,629 6,175 13,550 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 1,908 12,400 1,681 11,420 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,705 26,012 1,913 28,917 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 862 30,023 865 29,295 $50,000 or more ................................................: 1,401 309,160 951 160,914 : Utilities .....................................................farms: 15,852 (X) 17,498 (X) $1,000: (X) 357,174 (X) 270,332 percent of total: (X) 3.8 (X) 4.1 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .....................................................: 2,611 655 3,709 886 $500 to $999 ...................................................: 2,177 1,409 2,726 1,806 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 6,414 14,297 6,494 14,392 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 1,580 10,667 1,570 10,515 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,402 20,426 1,362 20,712 $25,000 or more ................................................: 1,668 309,720 1,637 222,020 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 605 20,577 636 22,292 $50,000 or more ..............................................: 1,063 289,143 1,001 199,728 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ......................farms: 18,678 (X) 20,142 (X) $1,000: (X) 632,154 (X) 418,246 percent of total: (X) 6.8 (X) 6.3 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 4,789 1,899 6,397 2,479 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 6,608 15,293 6,833 15,409 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 2,242 14,774 2,199 14,109 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 2,188 33,920 2,197 33,400 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,046 35,400 1,047 35,098 $50,000 or more ................................................: 1,805 530,868 1,469 317,750 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 756 50,931 641 45,058 $100,000 or more .............................................: 1,049 479,937 828 272,692 : Hired farm labor ..............................................farms: 5,697 (X) 7,186 (X) $1,000: (X) 1,043,118 (X) 735,969 percent of total: (X) 11.2 (X) 11.1 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 673 298 1,388 614 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 910 2,031 1,618 3,659 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 467 3,146 636 4,407 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 835 13,314 835 13,415 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 749 27,133 817 28,846 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Hired farm labor - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 678 47,446 677 46,350 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 1,385 949,750 1,215 638,678 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................................: 639 101,151 592 91,939 $250,000 to $499,999 .........................................: 324 107,919 316 108,540 $500,000 or more .............................................: 422 740,680 307 438,199 : Contract labor ................................................farms: 2,547 (X) 2,388 (X) $1,000: (X) 101,956 (X) 69,746 percent of total: (X) 1.1 (X) 1.0 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 452 217 604 266 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 752 1,839 711 1,671 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 322 2,124 272 1,776 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 431 6,809 340 5,240 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 256 9,119 198 6,619 $50,000 or more ................................................: 334 81,848 263 54,175 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 153 10,549 132 8,854 $100,000 or more .............................................: 181 71,299 131 45,321 : Customwork and custom hauling .................................farms: 5,857 (X) 7,048 (X) $1,000: (X) 247,148 (X) 167,865 percent of total: (X) 2.7 (X) 2.5 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 1,290 628 2,108 948 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 1,893 4,341 2,210 5,175 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 707 4,787 789 5,315 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 790 12,088 911 14,525 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 401 14,121 439 15,021 $50,000 or more ................................................: 776 211,183 591 126,881 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 323 22,169 297 19,867 $100,000 or more .............................................: 453 189,014 294 107,014 : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing fees ...............farms: 5,471 (X) 6,044 (X) $1,000: (X) 550,451 (X) 388,375 percent of total: (X) 5.9 (X) 5.8 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .....................................................: 447 108 508 127 $500 to $999 ...................................................: 325 221 481 323 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 1,264 3,003 1,507 3,641 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 590 4,081 765 5,419 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 871 13,907 1,029 17,122 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 577 20,324 523 18,568 $50,000 or more ................................................: 1,397 508,806 1,231 343,175 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, and farm : share of vehicles ............................................farms: 1,821 (X) 2,007 (X) $1,000: (X) 80,056 (X) 69,978 percent of total: (X) 0.9 (X) 1.1 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .....................................................: 235 51 369 88 $500 to $999 ...................................................: 173 109 185 127 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 436 1,058 538 1,174 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 222 1,412 222 1,429 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 294 4,763 287 4,398 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 151 5,307 158 5,463 $50,000 or more ................................................: 310 67,355 248 57,297 : Interest expense ..............................................farms: 6,805 (X) 8,257 (X) $1,000: (X) 286,045 (X) 253,583 percent of total: (X) 3.1 (X) 3.8 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 722 358 1,073 498 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 1,815 4,732 2,486 6,481 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 1,342 9,839 1,595 11,130 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,346 20,396 1,500 22,734 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 700 24,567 726 25,004 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 413 27,995 427 29,649 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 467 198,159 450 158,086 : Secured by real estate ......................................farms: 4,788 (X) 6,328 (X) $1,000: (X) 188,811 (X) 168,803 percent of total: (X) 2.0 (X) 2.5 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 429 204 746 309 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 1,138 3,157 1,934 5,255 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 1,102 7,960 1,330 9,222 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 1,082 16,454 1,151 17,598 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 452 15,867 552 18,626 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 293 19,664 339 23,227 $100,000 or more .............................................: 292 125,505 276 94,565 : Not secured by real estate ..................................farms: 4,230 (X) 5,001 (X) $1,000: (X) 97,234 (X) 84,780 percent of total: (X) 1.0 (X) 1.3 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................................: 780 377 1,313 570 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................................: 1,752 4,097 1,931 4,407 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 605 4,272 564 3,684 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 493 7,322 638 9,531 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 288 10,654 276 9,383 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 113 7,841 151 10,100 $100,000 or more .............................................: 199 62,671 128 47,106 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) : Farms : Expenses ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Property taxes paid ...........................................farms: 21,486 (X) 23,476 (X) $1,000: (X) 128,588 (X) 102,966 percent of total: (X) 1.4 (X) 1.5 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .....................................................: 2,687 631 3,915 886 $500 to $999 ...................................................: 2,396 1,746 3,752 2,756 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 12,498 29,231 11,971 26,354 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 2,036 13,723 2,046 13,856 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,125 16,754 1,199 18,422 $25,000 or more ................................................: 744 66,504 593 40,691 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock ................................................farms: 9,388 (X) 12,564 (X) $1,000: (X) 172,113 (X) 103,133 percent of total: (X) 1.8 (X) 1.6 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 4,904 1,855 7,914 2,675 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 2,952 5,933 3,214 7,046 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 720 4,650 633 4,131 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 408 5,886 456 6,604 : $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 143 4,949 130 4,677 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 91 6,298 79 5,130 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 170 142,542 138 72,870 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................................: 45 7,413 66 10,387 $250,000 or more .............................................: 125 135,129 72 62,483 : All other production expenses .................................farms: 12,433 (X) 10,195 (X) $1,000: (X) 447,370 (X) 349,302 percent of total: (X) 4.8 (X) 5.3 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................................: 3,415 1,318 2,198 1,055 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................................: 4,171 9,756 3,603 8,618 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................................: 1,413 9,118 1,365 9,202 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................................: 1,574 23,328 1,471 22,803 : $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 634 22,295 635 21,793 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 642 46,794 446 30,857 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 584 334,762 477 254,976 $100,000 to $249,999 .........................................: 299 44,586 293 44,980 $250,000 or more .............................................: 285 290,176 184 209,996 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ........................farms: 867 (X) 817 (X) $1,000: (X) 36,781 (X) 25,171 percent of total: (X) 0.4 (X) 0.4 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .......................................................: 51 12 52 15 $500 to $999 .....................................................: 23 15 86 60 $1,000 to $4,999 .................................................: 225 594 187 508 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 109 762 115 810 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 151 2,365 166 2,566 $25,000 or more ..................................................: 308 33,033 211 21,211 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 97 3,178 91 3,100 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 94 6,175 63 4,478 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 117 23,680 57 13,633 : Depreciation expenses claimed ...................................farms: 15,202 (X) 9,741 (X) $1,000: (X) 892,639 (X) 552,594 percent of total: (X) 9.6 (X) 8.3 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $499 .......................................................: 1,405 348 708 176 $500 to $999 .....................................................: 1,005 708 574 394 $1,000 to $4,999 .................................................: 4,362 11,816 2,468 6,343 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 2,332 16,389 1,497 10,152 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 2,406 37,894 1,664 25,969 $25,000 or more ..................................................: 3,692 825,484 2,830 509,560 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,297 45,654 1,127 39,642 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................................: 967 65,374 713 49,096 $100,000 or more ...............................................: 1,428 714,455 990 420,823 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/Landlord production expenses are included within total farm production expenses. Table 5. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Producers: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Income ($1,000) : Farms : Income ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Net cash farm income of the operations .....................: 22,877 2,034,090 24,996 1,312,355 Average per farm ................................dollars: (X) 88,914 (X) 52,503 : Farms with net gains 1/ ..................................: 8,958 2,463,552 10,072 1,707,468 Average per farm ..............................dollars: (X) 275,011 (X) 169,526 : Farms with gains of- : less than $1,000 .....................................: 625 292 845 396 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 1,519 4,175 1,760 4,849 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 841 6,054 1,061 7,624 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 1,326 22,014 1,631 27,603 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,020 36,990 1,186 42,977 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3,627 2,394,028 3,589 1,624,020 : Farms with net losses ....................................: 13,919 429,462 14,924 395,113 Average per farm ..............................dollars: (X) 30,854 (X) 26,475 : Farms with losses of- : less than $1,000 .....................................: 848 438 1,205 626 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 3,810 11,308 4,832 13,736 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 2,928 21,300 3,302 23,581 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 3,582 56,848 3,095 48,631 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,445 50,622 1,312 46,235 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,306 288,946 1,178 262,305 : Net cash farm income of producers ..........................: 22,877 1,897,116 24,996 1,235,021 Average per farm ................................dollars: (X) 82,927 (X) 49,409 : Producers reporting net gains 1/ .........................: 8,919 2,349,870 9,970 1,640,176 Average per farm ..............................dollars: (X) 263,468 (X) 164,511 : Farms with gains of- : less than $1,000 .....................................: 636 299 834 398 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 1,511 4,193 1,772 4,910 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 846 6,074 1,065 7,641 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 1,342 22,288 1,616 27,179 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 994 36,135 1,190 43,279 $50,000 or more ......................................: 3,590 2,280,881 3,493 1,556,769 : Producers reporting net losses ...........................: 13,958 452,754 15,026 405,155 Average per farm ..............................dollars: (X) 32,437 (X) 26,964 : Farms with losses of- : less than $1,000 .....................................: 843 437 1,214 630 $1,000 to $4,999 .....................................: 3,827 11,375 4,832 13,721 $5,000 to $9,999 .....................................: 2,922 21,295 3,307 23,611 $10,000 to $24,999 ...................................: 3,574 56,635 3,127 49,193 $25,000 to $49,999 ...................................: 1,453 50,897 1,333 46,871 $50,000 or more ......................................: 1,339 312,115 1,213 271,128 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1/Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. Table 6. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :: : 2022 : 2017 :-----------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------- : : Value : : Value :: : : Value : : Value Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) :: Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Government payments ...........................: 4,296 132,405 6,083 129,605 :: Government payments - Con. : Average per farm ...................dollars: (X) 30,821 (X) 21,306 :: Amount from other Federal farm : : :: programs - Con. : Farms with receipts of- : :: : $1 to $999 ................................: 510 232 847 412 :: Farms with receipts of- : $1,000 to $4,999 ..........................: 1,192 3,056 1,773 4,598 :: $1 to $999 ..............................: 418 182 954 446 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................: 697 5,013 861 6,324 :: $1,000 to $4,999 ........................: 688 1,735 1,671 4,145 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................: 725 11,488 1,162 18,288 :: $5,000 to $9,999 ........................: 450 3,285 744 5,442 $25,000 to $49,999 ........................: 498 17,944 726 25,634 :: $10,000 to $24,999 ......................: 508 7,944 962 14,820 $50,000 or more ...........................: 674 94,673 714 74,349 :: $25,000 or more .........................: 977 99,334 1,155 76,201 : :: : Amount from Conservation Reserve, : :: Commodity Credit Corporation Loans ............: 39 5,255 139 9,073 Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, : :: Average per farm ...................dollars: (X) 134,733 (X) 65,274 or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : :: : Programs ...................................: 1,681 19,925 1,773 28,550 :: Farms with receipts of- : Average per farm .................dollars: (X) 11,853 (X) 16,103 :: $1 to $999 ................................: 5 3 4 2 : :: $1,000 to $4,999 ..........................: 6 19 27 73 Farms with receipts of- : :: $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................: 1 (D) 5 35 $1 to $999 ..............................: 195 101 181 92 :: $10,000 to $19,999 ........................: 7 89 7 98 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................: 658 1,757 586 1,587 :: $20,000 to $24,999 ........................: 1 (D) 11 243 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................: 346 2,443 288 2,062 :: $25,000 to $49,999 ........................: 1 (D) 21 733 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................: 292 4,696 389 6,132 :: $50,000 or more ...........................: 18 5,077 64 7,890 $25,000 or more .........................: 190 10,927 329 18,677 :: : : :: Amount spent to repay CCC loans .............: 47 2,139 92 9,587 Amount from other Federal farm programs .....: 3,041 112,481 5,486 101,055 :: : Average per farm .................dollars: (X) 36,988 (X) 18,420 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 7. Income from Farm-Related Sources: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :: : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------:: :---------------------------------------------- : : Value : : Value :: : : Value : : Value Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) :: Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources .........: 7,733 327,387 8,879 266,869 :: Total income from farm-related : Average per farm ....................dollars: (X) 42,336 (X) 30,056 :: sources - Con. : : :: Agri-tourism and recreational : Farms with receipts of- : :: services - Con. : $1 to $999 .................................: 1,342 496 1,995 783 :: Farms with receipts of- - Con. : $1,000 to $4,999 ...........................: 2,032 5,131 2,456 5,896 :: : $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................: 1,090 7,566 989 6,764 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 20 121 11 78 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................: 1,211 18,982 1,407 22,250 :: $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 34 504 26 359 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................: 782 27,260 864 30,629 :: $25,000 or more ..........................: 63 16,214 36 8,687 $50,000 or more ............................: 1,276 267,952 1,168 200,547 :: : : :: Patronage dividends and refunds from : Customwork and other agricultural : :: cooperatives ................................: 2,432 27,917 3,044 23,329 services ....................................: 1,707 65,446 1,914 57,668 :: Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 11,479 (X) 7,664 Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 38,340 (X) 30,130 :: : : :: Farms with receipts of- : Farms with receipts of- : :: $1 to $999 ...............................: 1,124 315 1,519 434 $1 to $999 ...............................: 171 79 302 133 :: $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 649 1,520 871 2,013 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 455 1,115 472 1,088 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 237 1,550 252 1,733 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 254 1,702 273 1,831 :: $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 207 3,052 194 2,946 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 342 5,248 356 5,554 :: $25,000 or more ..........................: 215 21,480 208 16,203 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................: 213 7,333 227 7,901 :: : $50,000 or more ..........................: 272 49,969 284 41,162 :: Crop and livestock insurance : : :: payments ....................................: 966 51,896 805 39,878 Gross cash rent or share payments ............: 3,629 116,760 3,904 95,083 :: Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 53,723 (X) 49,538 Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 32,174 (X) 24,355 :: : : :: Farms with receipts of- : Farms with receipts of- : :: $1 to $999 ...............................: 65 30 98 48 $1 to $999 ...............................: 459 218 685 341 :: $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 208 560 200 519 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 1,122 2,894 1,187 2,867 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 117 905 80 595 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 613 4,345 546 3,726 :: $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 196 3,184 149 2,342 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 610 9,368 700 11,187 :: $25,000 or more ..........................: 380 47,218 278 36,374 $25,000 or more ..........................: 825 99,935 786 76,961 :: : : :: Amount from State and local government : Sales of forest products, excluding : :: agricultural program payments ...............: 129 982 112 908 Christmas trees, short rotation woody : :: Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 7,613 (X) 8,107 crops, and maple products ...................: 426 10,515 441 7,393 :: : Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 24,684 (X) 16,765 :: Farms with receipts of- : : :: $1 to $999 ...............................: 36 16 37 15 Farms with receipts of- : :: $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 42 94 33 64 $1 to $999 ...............................: 88 35 54 24 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 26 152 8 49 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 108 260 165 388 :: $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 14 241 19 283 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 56 368 59 399 :: $25,000 or more ..........................: 11 480 15 497 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 68 1,074 76 1,226 :: : $25,000 or more ..........................: 106 8,779 87 5,357 :: Other farm-related income sources ............: 870 36,961 1,438 33,368 : :: Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 42,484 (X) 23,205 Agri-tourism and recreational services .......: 200 16,909 176 9,242 :: : Average per farm ..................dollars: (X) 84,545 (X) 52,509 :: Farms with receipts of- : : :: $1 to $999 ...............................: 197 65 406 132 Farms with receipts of- : :: $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 273 654 411 1,011 $1 to $999 ...............................: 59 21 51 19 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .........................: 73 508 151 1,058 $1,000 to $4,999 .........................: 24 49 52 98 :: $10,000 to $24,999 .......................: 113 1,740 183 2,760 : :: $25,000 or more ..........................: 214 33,995 287 28,408 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 8. Land: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : :: : 2022 : :----------------------: :: :----------------------: : :Percent : :: : :Percent : : :of total: :: : :of total: All farms : Total :in 2022 : 2017 :: All farms : Total :in 2022 : 2017 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE : :: LAND USE - Con. : : :: : Farms ............................................number: 22,877 100.0 24,996 :: Total cropland - Con. : Land in farms .....................................acres: 11,547,963 100.0 11,691,912 :: Other cropland - Con. : : :: : Total cropland ....................................farms: 15,823 69.2 17,338 :: Cropland on which all crops failed or : acres: 5,623,516 48.7 5,894,676 :: were abandoned ...............................farms: 983 4.3 966 Harvested cropland ..............................farms: 13,037 57.0 15,028 :: acres: 59,462 0.5 60,004 acres: 4,370,363 37.8 4,576,077 :: Cropland in summer fallow .....................farms: 1,696 7.4 1,786 Farms by acres harvested: : :: acres: 318,125 2.8 306,469 1 to 49 acres ....................................: 7,454 32.6 8,449 :: : 1 to 9 acres ...................................: 4,033 17.6 4,447 :: Total woodland ....................................farms: 3,406 14.9 3,767 10 to 19 acres .................................: 1,591 7.0 1,831 :: acres: 479,705 4.2 524,137 20 to 29 acres .................................: 832 3.6 945 :: Woodland pastured ...............................farms: 1,561 6.8 1,779 30 to 49 acres .................................: 998 4.4 1,226 :: acres: 250,428 2.2 288,767 : :: Woodland not pastured ...........................farms: 2,265 9.9 2,399 50 to 99 acres ...................................: 1,154 5.0 1,474 :: acres: 229,277 2.0 235,370 100 to 199 acres .................................: 1,197 5.2 1,357 :: : 200 to 499 acres .................................: 1,342 5.9 1,700 :: Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : 500 to 999 acres .................................: 826 3.6 946 :: cropland and woodland pastured ...................farms: 12,204 53.3 13,851 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................: 519 2.3 584 :: acres: 5,012,618 43.4 4,871,617 2,000 acres or more ..............................: 545 2.4 518 :: : : :: Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : Other pasture and grazing land that could : :: facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc .........farms: 13,192 57.7 14,448 have been used for crops without : :: acres: 432,124 3.7 401,482 additional improvement .........................farms: 1,737 7.6 1,747 :: : acres: 214,761 1.9 197,524 :: CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : :: : Other cropland ..................................farms: 5,777 25.3 5,496 :: Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : acres: 1,038,392 9.0 1,121,075 :: Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : : :: Reserve Enhancement Programs .....................farms: 1,681 (X) 1,773 Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : :: acres: 423,658 (X) 568,878 soil-improvement, but not harvested and : :: : not pastured or grazed .......................farms: 3,822 16.7 3,537 :: Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ..........farms: 2,599 (X) 2,676 acres: 660,805 5.7 754,602 :: acres: 2,933,445 (X) 2,576,251 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 9. Land in Farms, Harvested Cropland, and Irrigated Land by Size of Farm: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Farms : Land in farms (acres) : Harvested cropland (acres) : Irrigated land (acres) :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All farms : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land in farms ....................................: 22,877 24,996 11,547,963 11,691,912 4,370,363 4,576,077 3,167,499 3,398,266 Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................: 5,785 6,673 27,849 32,421 7,367 9,513 14,904 17,031 10 to 49 acres ...............................: 6,977 7,337 152,698 164,793 52,525 58,637 61,368 69,961 50 to 69 acres ...............................: 881 950 50,791 55,060 16,297 19,613 17,423 21,279 70 to 99 acres ...............................: 1,133 1,277 91,750 104,089 32,736 43,786 32,847 42,994 100 to 139 acres .............................: 960 1,019 111,409 118,050 38,167 45,673 38,103 42,087 : 140 to 179 acres .............................: 927 915 146,182 143,855 51,732 53,108 50,455 50,695 180 to 219 acres .............................: 517 528 102,688 104,441 36,814 46,466 36,551 42,435 220 to 259 acres .............................: 432 493 103,105 117,049 43,884 56,175 39,723 54,100 260 to 499 acres .............................: 1,566 1,765 567,714 638,787 240,975 306,169 218,750 271,111 500 to 999 acres .............................: 1,384 1,606 969,169 1,127,215 450,037 549,139 354,563 470,714 : 1,000 to 1,999 acres .........................: 1,048 1,160 1,441,051 1,590,115 685,087 788,386 505,366 551,917 2,000 to 4,999 acres .........................: 824 864 2,424,567 2,633,217 1,237,666 1,253,443 806,436 799,304 5,000 acres or more ..........................: 443 409 5,358,990 4,862,820 1,477,076 1,345,969 991,010 964,638 : Farms with harvested cropland ....................: 13,037 15,028 8,906,734 9,057,378 4,370,363 4,576,077 3,078,153 3,286,347 Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................: 2,224 2,593 11,519 14,375 7,367 9,513 7,608 8,689 10 to 49 acres ...............................: 3,804 4,185 85,404 96,923 52,525 58,637 46,759 50,801 50 to 69 acres ...............................: 494 592 28,644 34,574 16,297 19,613 15,049 17,374 70 to 99 acres ...............................: 696 870 56,525 70,881 32,736 43,786 29,167 37,972 100 to 139 acres .............................: 571 683 66,818 79,117 38,167 45,673 32,714 38,861 : 140 to 179 acres .............................: 518 584 81,644 91,535 51,732 53,108 46,729 46,613 180 to 219 acres .............................: 330 376 65,487 74,396 36,814 46,466 33,472 39,192 220 to 259 acres .............................: 307 386 73,280 91,527 43,884 56,175 38,013 53,468 260 to 499 acres .............................: 1,103 1,372 403,832 499,784 240,975 306,169 209,158 260,666 500 to 999 acres .............................: 1,044 1,346 731,948 947,237 450,037 549,139 348,223 458,672 : 1,000 to 1,999 acres .........................: 862 970 1,190,144 1,330,401 685,087 788,386 496,903 545,153 2,000 to 4,999 acres .........................: 707 739 2,087,093 2,262,399 1,237,666 1,253,443 793,944 772,936 5,000 acres or more ..........................: 377 332 4,024,396 3,464,229 1,477,076 1,345,969 980,414 955,950 : Farms with irrigated land ........................: 14,191 15,597 7,245,166 7,513,974 3,405,694 3,577,459 3,167,499 3,398,266 Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................: 4,122 4,350 20,594 22,483 6,818 7,727 14,904 17,031 10 to 49 acres ...............................: 4,185 4,529 87,500 99,152 40,767 43,938 61,368 69,961 50 to 69 acres ...............................: 471 532 27,096 31,097 13,047 14,722 17,423 21,279 70 to 99 acres ...............................: 600 723 48,750 59,076 26,878 34,608 32,847 42,994 100 to 139 acres .............................: 507 538 58,817 62,126 30,556 35,450 38,103 42,087 : 140 to 179 acres .............................: 464 488 73,526 76,562 43,213 43,177 50,455 50,695 180 to 219 acres .............................: 290 298 57,831 58,992 31,795 37,424 36,551 42,435 220 to 259 acres .............................: 254 325 60,694 77,324 35,758 50,911 39,723 54,100 260 to 499 acres .............................: 938 1,148 342,153 419,176 201,313 265,394 218,750 271,111 500 to 999 acres .............................: 834 1,109 586,550 786,886 360,305 469,627 354,563 470,714 : 1,000 to 1,999 acres .........................: 668 720 917,681 975,123 521,843 572,123 505,366 551,917 2,000 to 4,999 acres .........................: 559 560 1,662,907 1,729,868 952,120 925,049 806,436 799,304 5,000 acres or more ..........................: 299 277 3,301,067 3,116,109 1,141,281 1,077,309 991,010 964,638 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 10. Irrigation: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with irrigation : 2022 : 2017 :: Farms with irrigation : 2022 : 2017 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Irrigated farms (see text) ......................number: 14,191 15,597 :: Irrigated land - Con. : Proportion of farms ........................percent: 62.0 62.4 :: Acres irrigated: - Con. : : :: : Irrigated land ...................................acres: 3,167,499 3,398,266 :: 1,000 to 1,999 acres .........................farms: 386 417 Average per farm .............................acres: 223 218 :: acres: 532,299 560,938 : :: 2,000 acres or more ..........................farms: 322 312 Acres irrigated: : :: acres: 1,449,710 1,430,640 1 to 9 acres .................................farms: 5,934 6,066 :: Irrigated land use: : acres: 24,839 26,532 :: Harvested cropland ...........................farms: 10,389 11,272 10 to 49 acres ...............................farms: 3,466 3,868 :: acres: 2,904,105 3,079,173 acres: 76,189 87,685 :: Pastureland and other land ...................farms: 6,620 7,841 50 to 99 acres ...............................farms: 1,058 1,384 :: acres: 263,394 319,093 acres: 73,684 95,471 :: : : :: Land in irrigated farms ..........................acres: 7,245,166 7,513,974 100 to 199 acres .............................farms: 1,122 1,234 :: Cropland .......................................acres: 3,993,572 4,158,797 acres: 158,602 172,546 :: Harvested cropland ...........................acres: 3,405,694 3,577,459 200 to 499 acres .............................farms: 1,226 1,500 :: : acres: 386,638 468,898 :: Land with irrigation systems or equipment : 500 to 999 acres .............................farms: 677 816 :: present (see text) ..............................farms: 14,784 (NA) acres: 465,538 555,556 :: acres: 3,391,992 (NA) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 11. Selected Characteristics of Irrigated and Nonirrigated Farms: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Irrigated farms : : :-----------------------------------------------------------: : : : All harvested : : All farms : Any land irrigated : cropland irrigated : Nonirrigated farms :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................................number: 22,877 24,996 14,191 15,597 9,229 9,577 8,686 9,399 Land in farms .......................................................acres: 11,547,963 11,691,912 7,245,166 7,513,974 4,622,398 4,366,494 4,302,797 4,177,938 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ..............................................dollars: 2,124,863 1,340,738 2,556,119 1,631,423 2,738,536 1,715,757 1,420,286 858,366 Average per acre ..............................................dollars: 4,209 2,866 5,007 3,386 5,468 3,763 2,867 1,931 : Irrigated land ......................................................acres: 3,167,499 3,398,266 3,167,499 3,398,266 2,311,242 2,277,610 (X) (X) : Land in farms according to use: : Total cropland ....................................................farms: 15,823 17,338 11,078 11,998 9,229 9,577 4,745 5,340 acres: 5,623,516 5,894,676 3,993,572 4,158,797 2,487,758 2,409,214 1,629,944 1,735,879 Harvested cropland ..............................................farms: 13,037 15,028 10,460 11,425 9,229 9,577 2,577 3,603 acres: 4,370,363 4,576,077 3,405,694 3,577,459 2,165,786 2,101,576 964,669 998,618 : Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........................farms: 13,178 14,771 8,495 9,896 4,267 4,737 4,683 4,875 acres: 5,227,379 5,069,141 2,991,538 3,119,130 1,979,130 1,801,391 2,235,841 1,950,011 Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve Enhancement : Programs ...........................................................farms: 1,681 1,773 382 554 224 299 1,299 1,219 acres: 423,658 568,878 111,365 171,306 59,997 87,829 312,293 397,572 Owned and rented land in farms: : Owned land in farms ...............................................farms: 21,588 23,409 13,423 14,553 8,668 8,894 8,165 8,856 acres: 7,737,908 7,877,743 4,828,920 5,090,879 3,122,207 2,929,318 2,908,988 2,786,864 Rented or leased land in farms ....................................farms: 5,752 6,656 4,070 4,840 2,922 3,119 1,682 1,816 acres: 3,810,055 3,814,169 2,416,246 2,423,095 1,500,191 1,437,176 1,393,809 1,391,074 : Market value of agricultural products sold .........................$1,000: 10,892,201 7,567,439 8,984,475 6,183,637 7,114,753 4,241,126 1,907,727 1,383,803 Average per farm ..............................................dollars: 476,120 302,746 633,111 396,463 770,913 442,845 219,632 147,229 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops .....................farms: 10,455 12,384 8,361 9,388 7,259 7,682 2,094 2,996 $1,000: 4,764,793 3,210,834 4,331,186 2,949,298 2,898,203 1,871,562 433,607 261,536 Livestock, poultry, and their products ............................farms: 10,666 12,305 6,937 7,992 3,741 4,035 3,729 4,313 $1,000: 6,127,408 4,356,606 4,653,288 3,234,339 4,216,550 2,369,565 1,474,120 1,122,267 : Total farm production expenses .....................................$1,000: 9,317,904 6,651,559 7,588,459 5,328,252 5,981,577 3,689,922 1,729,445 1,323,307 Average per farm ..............................................dollars: 407,304 266,105 534,737 341,620 648,128 385,290 199,107 140,792 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners purchased .................farms: 9,896 11,728 7,580 8,905 5,621 6,032 2,316 2,823 $1,000: 765,559 506,953 674,119 455,862 433,390 279,694 91,441 51,091 Chemicals purchased ...............................................farms: 10,419 12,014 7,772 8,937 5,483 5,819 2,647 3,077 $1,000: 410,258 286,983 361,683 247,919 225,343 152,904 48,575 39,064 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........................farms: 7,732 7,763 5,858 5,924 4,447 4,124 1,874 1,839 $1,000: 378,944 269,331 344,683 244,700 227,845 155,532 34,261 24,631 Cover crop seed purchased .......................................farms: 1,065 935 832 766 675 609 233 169 $1,000: 4,094 2,719 3,698 2,492 3,010 1,914 397 227 Livestock and poultry purchased or leased .........................farms: 6,503 7,526 4,178 4,947 2,147 2,413 2,325 2,579 $1,000: 722,700 616,455 449,417 381,235 410,718 319,226 273,283 235,220 : Feed purchased ....................................................farms: 13,525 15,186 8,377 9,315 4,322 4,483 5,148 5,871 $1,000: 2,598,813 1,794,336 1,942,004 1,313,754 1,794,515 969,766 656,808 480,582 Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............................farms: 21,557 23,333 13,642 14,911 8,946 9,167 7,915 8,422 $1,000: 395,457 248,007 335,968 203,004 242,175 130,513 59,490 45,003 Utilities .........................................................farms: 15,852 17,498 11,048 12,168 7,528 7,744 4,804 5,330 $1,000: 357,174 270,332 323,695 248,623 237,709 162,619 33,478 21,710 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........................farms: 18,678 20,142 12,323 13,346 8,254 8,343 6,355 6,796 $1,000: 632,154 418,246 541,993 355,557 413,503 242,805 90,161 62,689 : Hired farm labor ..................................................farms: 5,697 7,186 4,136 5,336 3,061 3,669 1,561 1,850 $1,000: 1,043,118 735,969 908,919 615,818 703,729 405,132 134,199 120,151 Contract labor ....................................................farms: 2,547 2,388 1,853 1,871 1,475 1,289 694 517 $1,000: 101,956 69,746 89,382 63,783 66,007 43,099 12,574 5,963 Customwork and custom hauling .....................................farms: 5,857 7,048 4,685 5,697 3,790 4,441 1,172 1,351 $1,000: 247,148 167,865 213,568 148,738 169,031 110,288 33,580 19,127 Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing fees ...................farms: 5,471 6,044 3,965 4,467 2,917 2,935 1,506 1,577 $1,000: 550,451 388,375 482,743 338,968 344,751 234,255 67,708 49,407 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, and : farm share of vehicles ...........................................farms: 1,821 2,007 1,285 1,475 972 965 536 532 $1,000: 80,056 69,978 66,660 59,673 46,605 41,462 13,396 10,305 Interest expense ..................................................farms: 6,805 8,257 4,793 5,830 3,426 3,793 2,012 2,427 $1,000: 286,045 253,583 247,324 220,189 186,690 146,301 38,721 33,394 Property taxes paid ...............................................farms: 21,486 23,476 13,357 14,634 8,664 8,969 8,129 8,842 $1,000: 128,588 102,966 96,138 77,660 70,416 48,727 32,451 25,306 Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock ....................................................farms: 9,388 12,564 6,137 8,196 3,452 4,276 3,251 4,368 $1,000: 172,113 103,133 137,166 75,210 121,015 54,258 34,947 27,923 All other production expenses .....................................farms: 12,433 10,195 8,350 6,988 5,848 4,605 4,083 3,207 $1,000: 447,370 349,302 372,998 277,559 288,137 193,339 74,372 71,743 : Commodity Credit Corporation loans ..................................farms: 39 139 18 102 11 51 21 37 $1,000: 5,255 9,073 1,116 5,038 362 2,106 4,139 4,036 Government payments .................................................farms: 4,296 6,083 1,968 3,732 1,377 2,571 2,328 2,351 $1,000: 132,405 129,605 67,097 77,528 43,995 47,838 65,308 52,077 Total income from farm-related sources ..............................farms: 7,733 8,879 4,952 5,722 3,572 3,839 2,781 3,157 $1,000: 327,387 266,869 226,707 189,561 171,979 124,537 100,681 77,309 : Estimated market value of all machinery and equipment ...............farms: 22,877 24,995 14,191 15,597 9,229 9,577 8,686 9,398 $1,000: 4,930,153 4,397,906 3,894,491 3,475,084 2,774,143 2,294,552 1,035,662 922,822 Average per farm ..............................................dollars: 215,507 175,951 274,434 222,805 300,590 239,590 119,233 98,193 : Livestock inventory: : Cattle and calves .................................................farms: 8,956 10,076 5,961 6,713 3,404 3,508 2,995 3,363 number: 2,517,987 2,435,137 1,930,468 1,856,782 1,661,678 1,305,583 587,519 578,355 Milk cows .......................................................farms: 549 785 391 574 267 352 158 211 number: 664,479 603,817 570,520 509,908 531,520 365,213 93,959 93,909 Hogs and pigs .....................................................farms: 562 606 272 350 147 155 290 256 number: 21,157 35,634 4,993 (D) 2,634 3,893 16,164 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Selected Characteristics of Irrigated and Nonirrigated Farms: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Irrigated farms : : :-----------------------------------------------------------: : : : All harvested : : All farms : Any land irrigated : cropland irrigated : Nonirrigated farms :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Livestock inventory: - Con. : : Sheep and lambs ...................................................farms: 1,208 1,447 772 886 329 389 436 561 number: 230,681 248,289 209,640 212,876 173,685 153,881 21,041 35,413 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 12. Cattle and Calves - Inventory: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :: : 2022 : 2017 :-----------------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cattle and calves .......................: 8,956 2,517,987 10,076 2,435,137 :: Cattle and calves - Con. : Farms with- : :: Cows and heifers that calved - Con. : 1 to 9 ..............................: 3,651 15,867 3,901 17,098 :: Milk cows ...........................: 549 664,479 785 603,817 10 to 19 ............................: 1,340 17,768 1,534 20,440 :: Farms with- : 20 to 49 ............................: 1,429 44,309 1,669 51,322 :: 1 to 9 ..........................: 259 485 337 648 50 to 99 ............................: 770 53,469 894 62,358 :: 10 to 19 ........................: 6 82 16 201 100 to 199 ..........................: 606 84,931 707 99,263 :: 20 to 49 ........................: 15 545 31 1,110 200 to 499 ..........................: 607 180,269 761 229,351 :: 50 to 99 ........................: 17 1,264 79 5,642 500 to 999 ..........................: 222 149,501 278 184,004 :: 100 to 199 ......................: 27 3,824 62 8,078 1,000 to 2,499 ......................: 182 276,657 182 276,088 :: 200 to 499 ......................: 58 20,213 79 23,485 2,500 to 4,999 ......................: 71 242,443 66 224,816 :: 500 to 999 ......................: 44 29,631 58 41,287 5,000 or more .......................: 78 1,452,773 84 1,270,397 :: 1,000 to 2,499 ..................: 65 107,083 61 100,994 : :: 2,500 or more ...................: 58 501,352 62 422,372 Cows and heifers that calved ..........: 7,712 1,113,728 8,613 1,101,801 :: : Farms with- : :: Other cattle ..........................: 6,745 1,404,259 7,499 1,333,336 1 to 9 ............................: 3,480 13,497 3,751 15,063 :: Farms with- : 10 to 19 ..........................: 1,055 14,010 1,148 15,329 :: 1 to 9 ............................: 3,360 13,551 3,696 15,031 20 to 49 ..........................: 1,289 38,530 1,454 43,331 :: 10 to 19 ..........................: 996 13,072 1,112 14,555 50 to 99 ..........................: 587 41,643 760 52,095 :: 20 to 49 ..........................: 1,042 31,259 1,151 34,897 100 to 199 ........................: 544 75,639 623 85,319 :: 50 to 99 ..........................: 479 32,286 514 34,978 200 to 499 ........................: 430 128,551 540 161,484 :: 100 to 199 ........................: 319 42,698 407 54,224 500 to 999 ........................: 152 101,920 164 111,636 :: 200 to 499 ........................: 245 74,095 311 92,988 1,000 to 2,499 ....................: 108 162,970 100 152,038 :: 500 to 999 ........................: 138 94,391 124 81,381 2,500 or more .....................: 67 536,968 73 465,506 :: 1,000 to 2,499 ....................: 83 125,691 101 153,495 : :: 2,500 or more .....................: 83 977,216 83 851,787 Beef cows ...........................: 7,379 449,249 8,149 497,984 :: : Farms with- : :: Cattle on feed ..........................: 122 336,862 111 267,766 1 to 9 ..........................: 3,402 13,272 3,665 14,727 :: Farms with- : 10 to 19 ........................: 1,044 13,876 1,141 15,238 :: 1 to 19 .............................: 16 213 16 223 20 to 49 ........................: 1,299 38,826 1,452 43,108 :: 20 to 49 ............................: 19 583 18 531 50 to 99 ........................: 581 41,093 710 48,101 :: 50 to 99 ............................: 20 1,207 21 1,499 100 to 199 ......................: 517 71,618 563 76,924 :: 100 to 199 ..........................: 9 1,304 21 2,589 200 to 499 ......................: 375 108,591 459 137,458 :: 200 to 499 ..........................: 28 8,963 10 3,007 500 to 999 ......................: 108 71,559 109 71,603 :: 500 to 999 ..........................: 11 7,390 7 4,751 1,000 to 2,499 ..................: 45 59,767 41 54,398 :: 1,000 to 2,499 ......................: 5 7,202 5 7,750 2,500 or more ...................: 8 30,647 9 36,427 :: 2,500 or more .......................: 14 310,000 13 247,416 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 13. Cattle and Calves - Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Number sold : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cattle and calves ............................: 7,630 1,835,062 2,175,548 8,757 1,870,607 1,787,255 Farms by number sold- : 1 to 9 ...................................: 3,400 13,020 13,730 3,820 14,657 13,420 10 to 19 .................................: 972 12,896 12,597 1,178 15,824 14,099 20 to 49 .................................: 1,150 35,997 35,513 1,341 40,541 35,693 50 to 99 .................................: 710 49,144 50,002 848 57,502 52,816 100 to 199 ...............................: 547 75,382 77,695 611 83,675 76,401 200 to 499 ...............................: 464 141,633 149,298 545 161,759 156,184 500 to 999 ...............................: 172 116,464 124,663 200 131,237 125,229 1,000 to 2,499 ...........................: 111 168,589 166,498 130 204,949 159,807 2,500 to 4,999 ...........................: 45 156,249 141,228 34 114,407 87,662 5,000 or more ............................: 59 1,065,688 1,404,324 50 1,046,056 1,065,944 : Cattle weighing 500 pounds : or more ...................................: 7,198 1,349,720 (NA) 8,170 1,337,512 (NA) Farms by number sold- : 1 to 9 .................................: 3,396 12,693 (NA) 3,714 13,313 (NA) 10 to 19 ...............................: 887 11,925 (NA) 1,084 14,415 (NA) 20 to 49 ...............................: 1,046 32,169 (NA) 1,310 39,439 (NA) 50 to 99 ...............................: 671 46,178 (NA) 733 50,149 (NA) 100 to 199 .............................: 464 63,872 (NA) 520 71,003 (NA) 200 to 499 .............................: 435 128,005 (NA) 498 145,871 (NA) 500 to 999 .............................: 150 102,875 (NA) 163 107,229 (NA) 1,000 to 2,499 .........................: 82 129,137 (NA) 97 155,455 (NA) 2,500 to 4,999 .........................: 31 104,782 (NA) 23 78,436 (NA) 5,000 or more ..........................: 36 718,084 (NA) 28 662,202 (NA) : Cattle on feed .............................: 228 492,887 (NA) 227 454,640 (NA) Farms by number sold- : 1 to 19 ................................: 51 738 (NA) 61 843 (NA) 20 to 49 ...............................: 53 1,621 (NA) 55 1,483 (NA) 50 to 99 ...............................: 32 2,096 (NA) 26 1,820 (NA) 100 to 199 .............................: 32 4,183 (NA) 20 2,863 (NA) 200 to 499 .............................: 25 7,050 (NA) 38 9,764 (NA) 500 to 999 .............................: 7 4,794 (NA) 8 5,619 (NA) 1,000 to 2,499 .........................: 12 18,532 (NA) 3 4,764 (NA) 2,500 to 4,999 .........................: 3 11,939 (NA) 3 8,263 (NA) 5,000 or more ..........................: 13 441,934 (NA) 13 419,221 (NA) : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds .......: 2,533 485,342 (NA) 2,758 533,095 (NA) Farms by number sold- : 1 to 9 .................................: 1,263 4,504 (NA) 1,368 5,006 (NA) 10 to 19 ...............................: 359 4,651 (NA) 420 5,402 (NA) 20 to 49 ...............................: 408 12,148 (NA) 429 12,392 (NA) 50 to 99 ...............................: 173 11,686 (NA) 196 13,042 (NA) 100 to 199 .............................: 110 15,287 (NA) 109 14,282 (NA) 200 to 499 .............................: 101 29,850 (NA) 115 34,149 (NA) 500 to 999 .............................: 47 33,865 (NA) 52 34,600 (NA) 1,000 or more ..........................: 72 373,351 (NA) 69 414,222 (NA) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 14. Cattle and Calves Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves inventory : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Cows and heifers : : : Total : that calved : Other cattle : Cattle and calves sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : Value Herd size : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 herd size of- : 1 to 9 ...........................................: 3,651 15,867 2,795 9,499 2,032 6,368 1,967 8,973 9,059 10 to 19 .........................................: 1,340 17,768 1,181 10,797 954 6,971 930 8,807 8,233 20 to 49 .........................................: 1,429 44,309 1,329 27,810 1,244 16,499 1,214 25,664 24,059 50 to 99 .........................................: 770 53,469 740 32,894 768 20,575 760 37,161 36,761 100 to 199 .......................................: 606 84,931 585 56,001 604 28,930 605 58,193 59,522 200 to 499 .......................................: 607 180,269 572 113,481 596 66,788 605 125,391 125,943 500 to 999 .......................................: 222 149,501 204 84,947 222 64,554 221 105,184 123,395 1,000 to 2,499 ...................................: 182 276,657 176 147,692 177 128,965 182 169,856 178,374 2,500 to 4,999 ...................................: 71 242,443 66 127,972 70 114,471 71 159,023 156,831 5,000 or more ....................................: 78 1,452,773 64 502,635 78 950,138 78 1,082,127 1,391,699 : All farms with December 31, 2022 inventory .........: 8,956 2,517,987 7,712 1,113,728 6,745 1,404,259 6,633 1,780,379 2,113,875 : Farms with no cattle and calves inventory, on : December 31, 2022 .................................: - - - - - - 997 54,683 61,673 : Total ..............................................: 8,956 2,517,987 7,712 1,113,728 6,745 1,404,259 7,630 1,835,062 2,175,548 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 15. Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves inventory : :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : Cows and heifers : : : Total : that calved : Other cattle : Cattle and calves sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : Value Cow herd 1/ : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .........................................: 3,480 23,338 3,480 13,497 1,861 9,841 1,974 10,245 10,068 10 to 19 .......................................: 1,055 21,777 1,055 14,010 669 7,767 804 10,306 9,996 20 to 49 .......................................: 1,289 61,618 1,289 38,530 1,104 23,088 1,217 41,495 38,969 50 to 99 .......................................: 587 69,857 587 41,643 585 28,214 587 46,837 52,926 100 to 199 .....................................: 544 130,274 544 75,639 542 54,635 544 93,223 117,015 200 to 499 .....................................: 430 261,318 430 128,551 419 132,767 430 193,745 226,052 500 to 999 .....................................: 152 182,621 152 101,920 152 80,701 152 106,434 115,522 1,000 to 2,499 .................................: 108 361,283 108 162,970 103 198,313 108 239,934 278,819 2,500 or more ..................................: 67 940,020 67 536,968 66 403,052 67 389,280 296,013 : All farms with December 31, 2022 cow inventory ...: 7,712 2,052,106 7,712 1,113,728 5,501 938,378 5,883 1,131,499 1,145,381 : Farms with no cow inventory, on : December 31, 2022 ...............................: 1,244 465,881 - - 1,244 465,881 1,747 703,563 1,030,167 : Total ............................................: 8,956 2,517,987 7,712 1,113,728 6,745 1,404,259 7,630 1,835,062 2,175,548 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Cow herd includes beef cows, milk cows, and heifers that calved. Table 16. Beef Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves inventory :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total :Cows and heifers that calved: Beef cows : Other cattle Beef cow herd :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 beef cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 3,402 27,844 3,402 16,114 3,402 13,272 1,807 11,730 10 to 19 ..............................................: 1,044 35,214 1,044 22,233 1,044 13,876 660 12,981 20 to 49 ..............................................: 1,299 108,219 1,299 64,228 1,299 38,826 1,115 43,991 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 85,836 581 50,422 581 41,093 579 35,414 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 125,043 517 72,770 517 71,618 515 52,273 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 252,570 375 124,754 375 108,591 374 127,816 500 to 999 ............................................: 108 127,758 108 71,559 108 71,559 108 56,199 1,000 to 2,499 ........................................: 45 174,465 45 61,967 45 59,767 45 112,498 2,500 or more .........................................: 8 54,261 8 30,647 8 30,647 8 23,614 : All farms with December 31, 2022 beef cow inventory .....: 7,379 991,210 7,379 514,694 7,379 449,249 5,211 476,516 : Farms with no beef cow inventory, on : December 31, 2022 ......................................: 1,577 1,526,777 333 599,034 - - 1,534 927,743 : Total ...................................................: 8,956 2,517,987 7,712 1,113,728 7,379 449,249 6,745 1,404,259 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Cattle : Calves Beef cow herd :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Total : Cattle on feed : : : : : Value :---------------------------------------------------: : : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 beef cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 1,948 11,807 10,954 1,733 8,856 9 245 520 2,951 10 to 19 ..............................................: 797 15,244 14,278 737 12,257 7 (D) 246 2,987 20 to 49 ..............................................: 1,227 60,862 56,550 1,190 41,145 56 3,816 509 19,717 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 55,916 58,616 581 43,847 27 6,036 203 12,069 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 93,313 117,063 517 80,418 29 22,359 206 12,895 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 182,830 218,066 373 163,729 21 16,100 138 19,101 500 to 999 ............................................: 108 81,462 93,094 108 71,890 17 5,573 44 9,572 1,000 to 2,499 ........................................: 45 139,589 202,101 45 133,448 9 44,127 16 6,141 2,500 or more .........................................: 8 38,678 37,789 8 27,795 1 (D) 5 10,883 : All farms with December 31, 2022 beef cow inventory .....: 5,606 679,701 808,511 5,292 583,385 176 100,108 1,887 96,316 : Farms with no beef cow inventory, on : December 31, 2022 ......................................: 2,024 1,155,361 1,367,037 1,906 766,335 52 392,779 646 389,026 : Total ...................................................: 7,630 1,835,062 2,175,548 7,198 1,349,720 228 492,887 2,533 485,342 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 17. Milk Cow Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves inventory :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Cows and heifers that calved : Milk cows : Other cattle :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Milk cow herd : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 milk cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .................................................: 259 6,667 259 4,442 259 485 188 2,225 10 to 19 ...............................................: 6 245 6 93 6 82 6 152 20 to 49 ...............................................: 15 1,473 15 702 15 545 12 771 50 to 99 ...............................................: 17 2,753 17 1,800 17 1,264 15 953 100 to 199 .............................................: 27 7,250 27 4,044 27 3,824 27 3,206 200 to 499 .............................................: 58 39,128 58 20,577 58 20,213 48 18,551 500 to 999 .............................................: 44 54,863 44 30,361 44 29,631 44 24,502 1,000 to 2,499 .........................................: 65 199,218 65 109,403 65 107,083 60 89,815 2,500 or more ..........................................: 58 879,559 58 502,121 58 501,352 57 377,438 : All farms with December 31, 2022 milk cow inventory ......: 549 1,191,156 549 673,543 549 664,479 457 517,613 : Farms with no milk cow inventory, on : December 31, 2022 .......................................: 8,407 1,326,831 7,163 440,185 - - 6,288 886,646 : Total ....................................................: 8,956 2,517,987 7,712 1,113,728 549 664,479 6,745 1,404,259 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Cattle and calves sales : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : Total : Cattle : Calves : Milk sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Milk cow herd : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 milk cow herd size of- : 1 to 9 .................................................: 166 4,383 4,069 146 3,302 82 1,081 27 212 10 to 19 ...............................................: 6 178 273 6 (D) 4 (D) 5 420 20 to 49 ...............................................: 15 433 377 15 (D) 10 (D) 15 2,974 50 to 99 ...............................................: 17 872 782 17 645 9 227 17 5,922 100 to 199 .............................................: 27 3,708 2,410 27 1,244 23 2,464 27 18,382 200 to 499 .............................................: 58 19,777 18,849 58 15,187 42 4,590 58 105,795 500 to 999 .............................................: 44 24,972 22,428 44 14,274 38 10,698 44 182,682 1,000 to 2,499 .........................................: 65 106,145 81,958 65 48,504 56 57,641 65 655,661 2,500 or more ..........................................: 58 347,702 255,605 58 150,362 52 197,340 58 2,740,879 : All farms with December 31, 2022 milk cow inventory ......: 456 508,170 386,751 436 233,981 316 274,189 316 3,712,927 : Farms with no milk cow inventory, on : December 31, 2022 .......................................: 7,174 1,326,892 1,788,797 6,762 1,115,739 2,217 211,153 14 14,450 : Total ....................................................: 7,630 1,835,062 2,175,548 7,198 1,349,720 2,533 485,342 330 3,727,378 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 18. Cattle and Calves - Number Sold per Farm by Sales: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Cattle weighing 500 : Calves weighing less than : Cattle and calves : pounds or more : 500 pounds :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Value : : : : Number sold : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total.............................................: 7,630 1,835,062 2,175,548 7,198 1,349,720 2,533 485,342 : Farms by number of cattle : and calves sold- : 1 to 9 .....................................: 3,400 13,020 13,730 3,083 10,809 783 2,211 10 to 19 ...................................: 972 12,896 12,597 913 10,509 344 2,387 20 to 49 ...................................: 1,150 35,997 35,513 1,112 29,253 468 6,744 50 to 99 ...................................: 710 49,144 50,002 707 41,027 264 8,117 100 to 199 .................................: 547 75,382 77,695 543 62,352 246 13,030 200 to 499 .................................: 464 141,633 149,298 460 117,084 212 24,549 500 to 999 .................................: 172 116,464 124,663 171 91,725 80 24,739 1,000 to 2,499 .............................: 111 168,589 166,498 109 119,486 70 49,103 2,500 or more ..............................: 104 1,221,937 1,545,552 100 867,475 66 354,462 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 19. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :: : 2022 : 2017 :-----------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------- Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total hogs and pigs ....................: 562 21,157 606 35,634 :: Total hogs and pigs - Con. : Farms with- : :: Farms with- - Con. : 1 to 24 ............................: 517 3,214 562 3,055 :: : 25 to 49 ...........................: 20 649 26 (D) :: 500 to 999 .........................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 50 to 99 ...........................: 5 (D) 8 604 :: 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 1 (D) 2 (D) 100 to 199 .........................: 6 960 1 (D) :: 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 200 to 499 .........................: 9 1,884 4 1,000 :: 5,000 or more ......................: 1 (D) 1 (D) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 20. Hogs and Pigs - Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total hogs and pigs sold ...............: 663 100,260 23,779 699 105,161 18,100 Farms with sales of- : 1 to 24 ............................: 576 3,409 866 627 3,619 648 25 to 49 ...........................: 37 1,205 172 25 883 111 50 to 99 ...........................: 18 1,290 202 12 831 73 100 to 199 .........................: 10 (D) 184 19 2,687 270 200 to 499 .........................: 15 4,677 886 10 (D) 412 500 to 999 .........................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) (D) 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 1 (D) (D) - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) (D) 5,000 or more ......................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 21. Hogs and Pigs Herd Size by Inventory and Sales: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Hogs and pigs inventory : Hogs and pigs sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Herd size : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 herd size of- : 1 to 24 ........................................: 517 3,214 362 4,881 774 25 to 49 .......................................: 20 649 20 1,966 287 50 to 99 .......................................: 5 (D) 5 322 92 100 to 199 .....................................: 6 960 6 1,644 278 200 to 499 .....................................: 9 1,884 9 2,465 629 500 to 999 .....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1,000 to 1,999 .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 2,000 to 4,999 .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 5,000 or more ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) : All farms with December 31, 2022 inventory .......: 562 21,157 407 98,763 23,400 : Farms with no hog or pig inventory, on : December 31, 2022 ...............................: - - 256 1,497 379 : Total ............................................: 562 21,157 663 100,260 23,779 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 22. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales by Number Sold per Farm: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with sales of- : 1 to 24 ........................................: 326 2,481 576 3,409 866 25 to 49 .......................................: 35 471 37 1,205 172 50 to 99 .......................................: 15 324 18 1,290 202 100 to 199 .....................................: 10 515 10 (D) 184 200 to 499 .....................................: 14 2,492 15 4,677 886 500 to 999 .....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1,000 to 1,999 .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 2,000 to 4,999 .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 5,000 or more ..................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) (D) : All farms with sales .............................: 407 20,541 663 100,260 23,779 : Farms with December 31, 2022 inventory : and no sales ....................................: 155 616 - - - : Total ............................................: 562 21,157 663 100,260 23,779 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 23. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory by Type of Producer: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Independent grower : Contractor or integrator : Contract grower (Contractee) :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Herd size : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total inventory ........................: 561 (D) 1 (D) - - Farms with- : 1 to 24 ............................: 517 3,214 - - - - 25 to 49 ...........................: 20 649 - - - - 50 to 99 ...........................: 5 (D) - - - - 100 to 199 .........................: 6 960 - - - - 200 to 499 .........................: 9 1,884 - - - - 500 to 999 .........................: 2 (D) - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 1 (D) - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 1 (D) - - - - 5,000 or more ......................: - - 1 (D) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 24. Hogs and Pigs - Number Sold by Type of Producer: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Independent grower : Contractor or integrator : Contract grower (Contractee) :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total hogs and pigs sold ...............: 662 (D) 1 (D) - - Farms with- : 1 to 24 ............................: 576 3,409 - - - - 25 to 49 ...........................: 37 1,205 - - - - 50 to 99 ...........................: 18 1,290 - - - - 100 to 199 .........................: 10 (D) - - - - 200 to 499 .........................: 15 4,677 - - - - 500 to 999 .........................: 2 (D) - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .....................: 1 (D) - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .....................: 1 (D) - - - - 5,000 or more ......................: 2 (D) 1 (D) - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 25. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory by Type of Operation: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : : Farrow to : : : Farrow to wean : Farrow to finish : Finish only : feeder : Nursery : Other :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Herd size : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total inventory ....................: 92 966 189 16,675 183 1,679 34 1,521 6 10 58 306 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ........................: 88 840 163 (D) 176 779 26 (D) 6 10 58 306 25 to 49 .......................: 4 126 7 213 3 90 6 220 - - - - 50 to 99 .......................: - - 5 (D) - - - - - - - - 100 to 199 .....................: - - 6 960 - - - - - - - - 200 to 499 .....................: - - 5 1,074 4 810 - - - - - - 500 to 999 .....................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .................: - - 1 (D) - - - - - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .................: - - 1 (D) - - - - - - - - 5,000 or more ..................: - - 1 (D) - - - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 26. Hogs and Pigs - Number Sold by Type of Operation: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : : : : Farrow to : : : Farrow to wean : Farrow to finish : Finish only : feeder : Nursery : Other :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hogs and pigs : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Total hogs and pigs sold ...........: 82 2,657 153 86,220 361 2,694 29 8,016 8 122 30 551 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ........................: 52 550 119 858 354 1,680 16 78 7 (D) 28 (D) 25 to 49 .......................: 17 530 12 353 3 89 5 233 - - - - 50 to 99 .......................: 7 (D) 8 675 - - 2 (D) 1 (D) - - 100 to 199 .....................: 4 460 3 384 - - 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 200 to 499 .....................: 2 (D) 8 2,800 4 925 - - - - 1 (D) 500 to 999 .....................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 .................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - - - 2,000 to 4,999 .................: - - 1 (D) - - - - - - - - 5,000 or more ..................: - - 2 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 27. Sheep and Lambs Flock Size by Inventory, Sales, and Wool Production: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Sheep and lambs inventory : Sheep and lambs sold : Wool production :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value : : : Value Flock size : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Pounds : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms with December 31, 2022 flock size of- : 1 to 24 ..................................: 864 7,962 429 3,634 624 146 13,363 3 25 to 99 .................................: 252 10,532 181 6,184 1,046 125 44,270 18 100 to 299 ...............................: 48 8,301 48 5,694 1,039 43 53,931 31 300 to 999 ...............................: 10 4,104 10 2,166 462 10 23,567 18 1,000 to 2,499 ...........................: 7 11,550 7 12,005 2,277 7 113,132 164 2,500 to 4,999 ...........................: 15 54,112 15 39,909 8,541 15 430,787 339 5,000 or more ............................: 12 134,120 12 126,657 26,491 12 1,024,393 1,355 : All farms with December 31, 2022 inventory .: 1,208 230,681 702 196,249 40,480 358 1,703,443 1,928 : Farms with no sheep or lamb inventory, on : December 31, 2022 .........................: - - 138 2,257 450 - - - : Total ......................................: 1,208 230,681 840 198,506 40,930 358 1,703,443 1,928 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 28. Goats, Kids, and Mohair - Inventory, Mohair Production, and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : : Value : : : Value Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :($1,000) : Farms : Number :($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Goats, all ..................................: 1,474 24,780 1,556 28,306 702 11,265 2,403 877 12,630 1,822 Angora goats and kids .....................: 122 763 107 360 23 112 15 30 60 5 Milk goats and kids .......................: 547 7,373 598 10,765 276 3,713 762 366 3,538 553 Meat goats and other goats and kids .......: 978 16,644 1,056 17,181 441 7,440 1,626 585 9,032 1,264 : Mohair clipped ........................pounds: (X) (X) (X) (X) 20 4,213 (D) 9 520 28 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 29. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Value :: : : : Value Equine : Farms : Number : ($1,000) :: Equine : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : :: SALES : : :: : Total horses and ponies ................: 6,660 41,412 (X) :: Total horses and ponies ................: 989 3,200 12,750 Farms with- : :: Farms by number sold- : 1 to 24 ............................: 6,496 32,530 (X) :: 1 to 24 ............................: 983 2,656 11,889 25 to 49 ...........................: 107 3,467 (X) :: 25 to 49 ...........................: 3 80 430 50 to 99 ...........................: 42 2,668 (X) :: 50 to 99 ...........................: 2 (D) (D) 100 or more ........................: 15 2,747 (X) :: 100 or more ........................: 1 (D) (D) : :: : Total mules, burros, and donkeys .......: 903 2,716 (X) :: Total mules, burros, and donkeys .......: 73 597 201 Farms with- : :: Farms by number sold- : 1 to 24 ............................: 893 2,238 (X) :: 1 to 24 ............................: 70 171 93 25 to 49 ...........................: 7 186 (X) :: 25 to 49 ...........................: 1 (D) (D) 50 or more .........................: 3 292 (X) :: 50 or more .........................: 2 (D) (D) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 30. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :: : 2022 : 2017 :---------------------------------------------------------:: :--------------------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : :: NUMBER SOLD - Con. : : :: : Layers ............................: 3,514 638,424 3,579 472,192 :: Pullets for laying : Farms with inventory of- : :: flock replacement ................: 43 (D) 32 (D) 1 to 49 .......................: 3,277 47,103 3,324 48,371 :: Farms by number sold- : 50 to 99 ......................: 179 11,093 189 11,297 :: 1 to 1,999 ....................: 42 1,470 31 776 100 to 399 ....................: 44 6,295 57 9,386 :: 2,000 to 15,999 ...............: - - - - 400 to 3,199 ..................: 9 11,935 6 6,620 :: 16,000 to 29,999 ..............: - - - - 3,200 to 9,999 ................: - - - - :: 30,000 to 59,999 ..............: - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..............: 1 (D) 1 (D) :: 60,000 to 99,999 ..............: - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..............: 2 (D) - - :: 100,000 or more ...............: 1 (D) 1 (D) 50,000 to 99,999 ..............: - - - - :: : 100,000 or more ...............: 2 (D) 2 (D) :: Broilers and other meat-type : : :: chickens .........................: 155 11,815 213 17,852 : :: Farms by number sold- : Pullets for laying : :: 1 to 1,999 ....................: 155 11,815 211 (D) flock replacement ................: 447 (D) 535 (D) :: 2,000 to 15,999 ...............: - - 2 (D) : :: 16,000 to 29,999 ..............: - - - - Broilers and other meat-type : :: 30,000 to 59,999 ..............: - - - - chickens .........................: 350 12,403 430 11,548 :: 60,000 to 99,999 ..............: - - - - : :: 100,000 to 199,999 ............: - - - - Turkeys ...........................: 297 4,644 314 4,793 :: 200,000 to 299,999 ............: - - - - : :: 300,000 to 499,999 ............: - - - - Chukars ...........................: 17 2,985 22 11,966 :: 500,000 or more ...............: - - - - : :: : Ducks .............................: 449 5,611 366 8,124 :: Turkeys ...........................: 95 4,156 170 4,905 : :: Farms by number sold- : Emus ..............................: 25 99 12 74 :: 1 to 1,999 ....................: 94 (D) 169 (D) : :: 2,000 to 7,999 ................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Geese .............................: 137 589 145 721 :: 8,000 to 15,999 ...............: - - - - : :: 16,000 to 29,999 ..............: - - - - Guineas ...........................: 142 946 106 871 :: 30,000 to 59,999 ..............: - - - - : :: 60,000 to 99,999 ..............: - - - - Hungarian partridge ...............: 3 (D) - - :: 100,000 or more ...............: - - - - : :: : Ostriches .........................: - - - - :: Chukars ...........................: 10 18,167 11 41,176 : :: : Peacocks or peahens ...............: 88 651 58 600 :: Ducks .............................: 71 (D) 70 (D) : :: : Pheasants .........................: 21 28,359 37 40,828 :: Emus ..............................: 1 (D) - - : :: : Pigeons or squab ..................: 36 1,682 34 5,117 :: Geese .............................: 33 121 26 361 : :: : Quail .............................: 48 2,872 24 4,606 :: Guineas ...........................: 12 93 32 307 : :: : Rheas .............................: - - - - :: Hungarian partridge ...............: 3 17,000 - - : :: : Roosters ..........................: 503 13,688 426 (D) :: Ostriches .........................: 2 (D) - - : :: : Other poultry .....................: 1 (D) 32 339 :: Peacocks or peahens ...............: 7 16 11 73 : :: : : :: Pheasants .........................: 14 94,488 17 97,685 NUMBER SOLD : :: : : :: Pigeons or squab ..................: 7 443 13 5,970 Layers ............................: 358 (D) 503 295,644 :: : Farms by number sold- : :: Quail .............................: 14 1,779 8 2,285 1 to 99 .......................: 334 5,542 481 7,066 :: : 100 to 399 ....................: 14 2,700 13 2,062 :: Rheas .............................: - - - - 400 to 3,199 ..................: 9 9,400 5 4,390 :: : 3,200 to 9,999 ................: - - 1 (D) :: Roosters ..........................: 74 (D) 88 (D) 10,000 to 19,999 ..............: - - 1 (D) :: : 20,000 to 49,999 ..............: - - 1 (D) :: Other poultry .....................: - - 1 (D) 50,000 to 99,999 ..............: - - - - :: : 100,000 or more ...............: 1 (D) 1 (D) :: Poultry hatched ...................: 528 (D) 535 28,569,633 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 31. Aquaculture Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------- : : Value : : Value Item : Farms : ($1,000) : Farms : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Catfish ................................: 1 (D) 2 (D) : Trout ..................................: 29 56,475 41 88,834 : Other food fish ........................: 24 18,583 22 7,965 : Baitfish ...............................: - - - - : Crustaceans ............................: - - 1 (D) : Mollusks ...............................: - - - - : Ornamental fish ........................: - - 1 (D) : Sport or game fish .....................: 3 (D) 7 (D) : Other aquaculture products .............: 1 (D) 2 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 32. Other Animals - Inventory: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :: : 2022 : 2017 :---------------------------------------------:: :--------------------------------------------- Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number :: Item : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Colonies of honey bees .................: 669 154,589 564 130,998 :: Llamas .................................: 125 735 166 819 : :: : Bison ..................................: 42 5,361 50 18,634 :: Mink, live .............................: 11 21,131 23 76,586 : :: : Deer in captivity ......................: 5 231 3 (D) :: Rabbits, live ..........................: 80 1,381 89 1,552 : :: : Elk in captivity .......................: 16 2,517 15 2,427 :: Other livestock ........................: 22 (X) 37 (X) : :: : Alpacas ................................: 127 1,304 151 1,607 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 33. Other Animals and Animal Products - Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Value : : : Value Item : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Honey collected 1/ (pounds) ................................: 394 5,762,856 13,793 327 4,481,733 8,571 : Milk from sheep and goats ..................................: 98 (NA) 1,444 118 (NA) 1,945 : Bison ......................................................: 20 1,217 2,418 24 4,699 9,411 : Deer in captivity ..........................................: 3 6 3 2 (D) (D) : Elk in captivity ...........................................: 12 436 872 14 380 1,476 : Alpacas ....................................................: 18 119 129 20 141 206 : Llamas .....................................................: 15 39 31 10 25 23 : Mink, live .................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) (D) : Rabbits, live ..............................................: 33 1,769 38 40 3,255 51 : Equine products ............................................: 149 (X) 1,239 202 (X) 1,169 : Other livestock ............................................: 27 (X) (D) 18 (X) 2,292 : Other livestock products 1/ ................................: 103 (X) 4,639 89 (X) 13,938 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1/Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 34. Specified Crops Harvested - Yield per Acre Irrigated and Nonirrigated: 2022 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Entire crop irrigated : Part of crop irrigated : None of crop irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : :Average yield: : Acres : Acres not :Average yield: : :Average yield Crop : Farms : Acres : per acre : Farms : irrigated : irrigated : per acre : Farms : Acres : per acre ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Barley for grain (bushels) .......................: 912 301,329 119.1 101 47,638 58,186 66.1 309 131,433 60.0 Corn for grain (bushels) .........................: 648 126,508 181.3 - - - - - - - Corn for silage or greenchop (tons) ..............: 770 (D) (D) - - - - 2 (D) (D) Cotton, all (bales) ..............................: - - - - - - - - - - Upland cotton (bales) ..........................: - - - - - - - - - - Pima cotton (bales) ............................: - - - - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas (cwt) .................................: 213 31,511 24.9 - - - - 14 3,552 23.4 Oats for grain (bushels) .........................: 39 (D) (D) 2 (D) (D) (D) 74 6,734 54.4 Peanuts for nuts (pounds) ........................: - - - - - - - - - - Rice (cwt) .......................................: - - - - - - - - - - Sorghum for grain (bushels) ......................: 4 (D) (D) - - - - 1 (D) (D) Soybeans for beans (bushels) .....................: 5 205 20.6 - - - - 3 99 49.2 Sugarbeets for sugar (tons) ......................: 452 178,358 36.8 - - - - - - - Sugarcane for sugar or : seed (tons) (see text) ..........................: - - - - - - - - - - Tobacco (pounds) .................................: - - - - - - - - - - Wheat for grain, all (bushels) ...................: 1,154 368,569 109.4 164 80,139 104,512 67.6 892 609,377 67.2 Winter wheat for grain (bushels) ...............: 827 247,134 115.8 57 21,059 17,926 71.4 822 500,330 71.7 Durum wheat for grain (bushels) ................: 33 (D) (D) 3 (D) (D) 100.0 14 (D) (D) Other spring wheat for grain (bushels) .........: 498 155,270 95.9 49 19,445 41,174 43.3 371 150,009 54.3 : Forage - land used for all hay and : haylage, grass silage, and greenchop : (tons, dry equivalent) ..........................: 7,571 1,001,484 (X) 471 100,916 96,457 (X) 2,237 217,008 (X) Alfalfa hay (tons, dry) ..........................: 6,192 809,459 4.2 274 60,642 61,357 2.2 1,014 116,110 1.9 Other dry hay (tons, dry) ........................: 1,860 121,427 2.6 133 9,708 15,560 2.4 1,310 104,463 2.0 Haylage or greenchop from alfalfa or : alfalfa mixtures (tons, green) ..................: 514 111,302 11.2 4 193 202 (D) 9 253 (D) All other haylage, grass silage, : and greenchop (tons, green) .....................: 531 48,684 8.9 24 400 688 0.8 347 16,014 2.0 : Land in vegetables ...............................: 1,198 334,246 (X) 34 17 (D) (X) 3 (D) (X) Land in orchards .................................: 550 5,499 (X) 15 (D) (D) (X) 2 (D) (X) Land in berries ..................................: 268 207 (X) - - - (X) - - (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 35. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD CROPS : : Barley for grain (bushels) ...............................: 1,322 538,586 50,782,418 1,013 348,967 1,669 524,307 50,452,071 1,315 378,475 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 83 645 56,737 74 561 121 864 62,676 89 697 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 63 1,193 122,443 55 1,000 131 2,528 193,730 100 1,896 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 140 4,815 480,099 119 4,054 173 6,331 471,959 134 4,722 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 182 12,892 1,329,252 137 9,436 278 19,602 1,719,230 216 14,603 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 323 50,174 5,127,617 216 32,746 461 71,811 6,864,642 358 53,406 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 243 85,387 8,196,554 189 62,512 267 94,711 9,027,098 212 71,075 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 155 105,836 10,028,328 124 75,051 117 78,580 7,525,290 101 60,119 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 133 277,644 25,441,388 99 163,607 121 249,880 24,587,446 105 171,957 : Camelina (pounds) ........................................: 6 162 324,000 6 162 - - - - - : Canola (pounds) ..........................................: 179 60,905 100,727,242 22 3,148 87 20,759 37,360,350 12 1,488 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 3 (D) (D) - - 4 (D) (D) 2 (D) 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 3 136 74,700 - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 23 1,741 2,462,670 6 324 18 1,242 1,745,915 2 (D) 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 72 10,870 18,963,577 12 1,621 40 6,865 11,814,407 6 910 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 42 14,511 26,148,345 4 1,203 12 4,053 8,352,206 1 (D) 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 25 18,620 30,461,166 - - 8 4,644 6,384,838 - - 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 10 14,967 22,597,451 - - 3 3,841 8,851,525 - - : Chickpeas, all (cwt) (see text) ..........................: 146 61,066 828,426 3 261 244 117,935 1,507,137 13 1,146 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 15 to 24 acres .........................................: - - - - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 13 916 11,466 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 44 7,148 125,230 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 44 15,567 204,659 - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 28 18,210 253,262 - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 13 19,105 231,997 - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Corn for grain (bushels) .................................: 648 126,508 22,937,258 648 126,508 713 143,263 27,925,762 713 143,263 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 85 444 72,876 85 444 65 424 65,836 65 424 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 62 1,158 235,000 62 1,158 83 1,546 259,420 83 1,546 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 95 3,377 626,832 95 3,377 142 4,967 943,292 142 4,967 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 121 8,376 1,704,813 121 8,376 115 8,238 1,650,801 115 8,238 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 153 22,947 4,260,003 153 22,947 172 26,614 5,427,575 172 26,614 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 77 25,765 4,852,984 77 25,765 79 26,529 5,643,960 79 26,529 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 34 22,010 4,184,073 34 22,010 28 18,952 3,692,740 28 18,952 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 21 42,431 7,000,677 21 42,431 29 55,993 10,242,138 29 55,993 : Corn for silage or greenchop (tons) ......................: 772 258,326 7,412,427 770 (D) 1,031 275,136 8,047,967 1,031 275,136 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 53 380 10,310 53 380 73 550 12,971 73 550 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 44 838 23,846 44 838 64 1,193 26,421 64 1,193 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 98 3,490 99,647 98 3,490 183 6,557 185,823 183 6,557 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 140 10,218 292,479 140 10,218 180 13,000 369,107 180 13,000 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 210 31,593 918,561 208 (D) 284 43,291 1,250,479 284 43,291 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 97 32,817 956,052 97 32,817 119 40,381 1,182,193 119 40,381 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 64 43,946 1,147,208 64 43,946 60 39,963 1,164,194 60 39,963 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 66 135,044 3,964,324 66 135,044 68 130,201 3,856,779 68 130,201 : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and : limas (cwt) .............................................: 227 35,063 868,671 213 31,511 506 69,020 1,757,790 471 59,821 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 13 125 2,779 13 125 34 291 6,546 34 291 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 24 445 12,663 24 445 36 669 18,311 33 602 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 37 1,299 31,052 37 1,299 85 3,090 78,026 77 2,842 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 55 3,826 96,675 53 (D) 120 8,696 225,438 118 (D) 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 62 9,539 247,173 55 8,441 165 25,287 632,273 154 23,207 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 22 7,155 179,156 19 6,025 50 17,604 451,602 42 14,153 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 11 7,268 161,679 9 (D) 12 8,276 217,121 10 (D) 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 5,107 128,473 3 (D) 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Dry edible peas (cwt) ....................................: 155 27,382 582,714 53 3,866 115 15,171 286,636 52 3,810 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 5 43 (D) 5 43 5 49 (D) 3 (D) 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 14 (D) (D) 11 208 13 254 5,565 8 (D) 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 9 322 8,672 6 223 21 786 18,185 13 468 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 34 2,447 45,735 18 1,260 27 1,934 39,203 17 1,146 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 60 9,335 238,756 13 2,132 33 5,275 99,302 8 1,225 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 23 7,755 150,867 - - 12 4,112 78,791 3 781 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 8 4,966 81,906 - - 4 2,761 (D) - - 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Flaxseed (bushels) .......................................: 9 1,188 10,406 6 272 12 2,003 58,436 6 (D) : Hemp for fiber (pounds) (see text) .......................: 1 (D) (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Hops (pounds) ............................................: 16 9,785 16,375,200 16 9,785 25 9,641 19,869,139 25 9,641 : Lentils (cwt) ............................................: 54 13,727 87,860 - - 105 34,864 343,556 3 70 : Mint for oil, all (pounds of oil) ........................: 100 13,955 1,602,557 100 13,955 107 20,178 2,230,783 107 20,178 : Mint, peppermint for oil, (pounds of : oil) (see text) .........................................: 88 13,159 1,507,987 88 13,159 105 19,092 2,093,183 105 19,092 : Mint, spearmint for oil, (pounds of : oil) (see text) .........................................: 21 796 94,570 21 796 21 1,086 137,600 21 1,086 : Oats for grain (bushels) .................................: 115 11,088 704,503 41 4,324 124 10,416 661,344 59 4,523 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 16 137 6,298 4 28 21 (D) (D) 11 (D) 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 6 103 4,589 2 (D) 16 294 20,731 11 206 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 28 887 56,175 13 387 29 957 70,486 11 390 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 32 2,290 164,010 15 1,065 22 1,332 88,053 10 545 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 27 3,613 230,531 5 712 25 3,653 206,804 11 1,417 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 3 958 92,900 - - 10 3,375 214,996 4 1,231 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 35. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD CROPS - Con. : : Oats for grain (bushels) - Con. : : 500 to 999 acres .......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 3 3,100 150,000 2 (D) - - - - - : Popcorn (pounds, shelled) ................................: 8 104 184,187 8 104 7 253 495,741 7 253 : Rye for grain (bushels) ..................................: - - - - - 4 20 1,070 - - : Safflower (pounds) .......................................: 40 22,893 13,294,641 7 1,366 105 19,191 16,411,948 33 684 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 12 60 59,400 12 60 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 6 120 (D) - - 25 to 49 acres .........................................: - - - - - 10 286 250,200 - - 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 22 1,449 958,157 6 120 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 6 860 (D) 1 (D) 38 5,882 4,228,191 12 354 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 8 2,557 1,887,744 4 (D) 10 3,435 2,532,000 3 150 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 15 10,245 6,313,520 1 (D) 3 1,800 (D) - - 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 7 9,072 (D) - - 4 6,159 6,740,000 - - : Sorghum for grain (bushels) ..............................: 5 485 52,100 4 (D) 6 469 43,610 5 (D) : Sorghum for silage or greenchop (tons) ...................: 5 2,082 39,562 4 (D) 21 1,559 22,489 21 1,553 : Soybeans for beans (bushels) .............................: 8 304 9,092 5 205 2 (D) (D) - - : Sugarbeets for sugar (tons) ..............................: 452 178,358 6,570,132 452 178,358 460 168,376 6,521,838 460 168,376 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 13 88 2,973 13 88 19 136 4,357 19 136 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 18 344 10,900 18 344 10 196 8,055 10 196 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 37 1,383 53,294 37 1,383 33 1,173 44,232 33 1,173 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 60 4,399 166,577 60 4,399 62 4,443 172,011 62 4,443 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 126 21,017 780,313 126 21,017 157 27,113 1,049,661 157 27,113 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 98 34,002 1,229,407 98 34,002 89 31,032 1,212,047 89 31,032 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 63 46,673 1,841,073 63 46,673 57 37,429 1,456,650 57 37,429 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...................................: 27 36,339 1,328,526 27 36,339 22 30,102 1,164,864 22 30,102 2,000 acres or more ....................................: 10 34,113 1,157,069 10 34,113 11 36,752 1,409,961 11 36,752 : Sunflower seed, all (pounds) .............................: 10 938 1,500,019 9 (D) 3 (D) 454,518 1 (D) : Sunflower seed - oil varieties (pounds) ................: 9 (D) (D) 9 (D) 3 (D) 454,518 1 (D) : Sunflower seed - non-oil varieties (pounds) ............: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Triticale for grain (bushels) (see text) .................: 26 2,418 211,543 25 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Wheat for grain, all (bushels) ...........................: 2,210 1,162,597 93,723,621 1,318 448,708 2,585 1,182,797 94,183,336 1,704 550,934 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 141 1,099 127,052 117 940 130 988 85,040 94 762 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 115 2,226 213,227 78 1,492 176 3,417 293,389 131 2,508 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 223 8,253 750,847 160 5,838 264 9,098 819,852 212 7,082 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 316 22,142 2,191,100 237 16,261 361 25,377 2,364,171 282 19,340 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 480 77,299 7,419,774 294 45,454 651 102,958 8,899,734 464 69,298 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 317 109,284 9,839,313 161 47,546 387 135,597 11,558,204 246 78,944 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 294 207,795 17,305,961 138 79,247 288 200,701 14,801,362 114 71,349 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 324 734,499 55,876,347 133 251,930 328 704,661 55,361,584 161 301,651 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 196 268,973 20,192,712 75 78,310 221 298,780 22,283,253 99 106,118 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 59 138,543 10,325,892 27 52,393 51 123,719 11,205,184 33 68,981 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 56 212,605 17,524,910 24 76,070 33 115,732 8,187,704 16 42,839 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 13 114,378 7,832,833 7 45,157 23 166,430 13,685,443 13 83,713 : Winter wheat for grain (bushels) .......................: 1,706 786,449 67,262,659 884 268,193 1,775 720,308 57,773,652 1,027 274,198 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 110 848 100,469 82 702 68 529 50,140 51 426 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 77 1,482 147,380 47 923 135 2,634 226,835 85 1,623 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 139 5,109 519,774 106 3,799 197 6,878 674,226 161 5,401 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 247 17,383 1,764,292 171 11,863 276 19,570 1,855,793 195 13,261 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 394 62,424 5,900,851 202 30,827 395 63,221 5,701,851 244 37,704 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 311 109,339 10,069,304 136 43,282 282 98,491 8,284,055 150 46,042 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 222 154,808 13,367,432 80 50,514 246 170,531 12,938,281 82 50,615 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 206 435,056 35,393,157 60 126,283 176 358,454 28,042,471 59 119,126 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 132 184,582 14,305,254 39 52,950 122 166,128 12,091,360 38 41,788 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 39 (D) 8,289,403 11 24,477 30 72,061 6,008,751 12 27,100 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 28 101,270 7,938,175 8 (D) 16 59,934 4,434,125 5 17,156 5,000 acres or more ................................: 7 (D) 4,860,325 2 (D) 8 60,331 5,508,235 4 33,082 : Durum wheat for grain (bushels) ........................: 50 10,250 801,586 36 5,800 82 23,590 1,914,309 74 16,990 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 6 50 4,687 5 (D) 11 96 6,106 11 96 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 7 121 (D) 7 121 5 83 7,200 5 83 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 11 (D) 30,895 5 188 7 240 18,342 5 (D) 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 5 (D) 32,511 2 (D) 17 1,083 114,661 17 1,083 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 9 (D) 125,399 7 (D) 16 2,748 287,246 14 (D) 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 6 1,862 (D) 6 1,781 13 4,358 409,319 11 (D) 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 5 3,342 (D) 4 (D) 8 5,564 399,283 7 (D) 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 5 9,418 672,152 4 (D) 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: - - - - - - - - - - 5,000 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - - - - : Other Spring wheat for grain (bushels) .................: 918 365,898 25,659,376 547 174,715 1,301 438,899 34,495,375 867 259,746 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 43 304 32,655 38 265 72 515 42,785 46 348 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 44 863 72,393 32 601 73 1,385 119,499 62 1,172 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 107 4,004 315,053 66 2,490 121 4,283 343,162 90 3,127 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 157 11,100 994,669 97 6,516 185 13,072 955,299 120 8,532 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 230 38,033 3,331,687 141 23,146 395 61,544 4,660,142 265 39,290 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 128 43,444 3,199,237 59 17,920 227 79,511 6,297,493 134 44,296 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 97 68,519 4,835,053 41 25,686 133 92,603 7,073,746 78 50,419 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 112 199,631 12,878,629 73 98,091 95 185,986 15,003,249 72 112,562 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 90 (D) (D) 60 60,295 70 (D) 8,255,546 52 63,186 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 13 (D) (D) 7 12,591 14 (D) (D) 13 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 35. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD CROPS - Con. : : Wheat for grain, all (bushels) - Con. : Other Spring wheat for grain (bushels) - Con. : : 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 6 (D) (D) 3 10,771 9 35,751 2,443,582 5 18,310 5,000 acres or more ................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 14,434 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : FIELD AND GRASS SEEDS, FORAGE, AND HAY : : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................: 187 56,098 (X) 79 14,585 168 43,570 (X) 52 8,817 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 27 (D) (X) 16 138 11 55 (X) 10 (D) 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 4 78 (X) 3 (D) 10 184 (X) 2 (D) 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 13 (D) (X) 9 291 33 1,150 (X) 11 349 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 27 1,861 (X) 13 943 23 1,767 (X) 8 619 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 46 7,756 (X) 19 3,148 30 4,643 (X) 8 1,199 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 32 11,976 (X) 13 4,922 33 12,848 (X) 9 2,957 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 24 16,010 (X) 5 3,885 24 17,504 (X) 3 2,035 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 14 17,818 (X) 1 (D) 4 5,419 (X) 1 (D) : Alfalfa seed (pounds) ..................................: 69 13,127 8,860,701 65 12,634 19 5,492 5,447,004 17 (D) 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 13 (D) (D) 11 (D) 3 6 630 3 6 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 9 291 (D) 9 291 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 10 765 673,729 10 765 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 19 2,815 2,905,172 18 (D) 3 363 385,500 1 (D) 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 11 4,040 2,341,241 10 (D) 6 2,142 1,732,500 6 2,142 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 5 3,885 1,362,200 5 3,885 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Fescue seed (pounds) ...................................: 17 2,953 292,233 - - 16 3,080 1,063,012 1 (D) : Ryegrass seed (pounds) .................................: 11 380 (D) - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and all : haylage, grass silage, and greenchop (tons, : dry equivalent) .........................................: 10,279 1,415,865 5,361,120 8,042 1,102,400 12,276 1,509,295 5,833,186 9,191 1,142,122 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 3,791 25,225 56,975 3,040 19,324 4,496 29,808 73,766 3,349 21,413 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 1,093 20,151 54,746 779 14,124 1,384 25,622 69,721 906 16,645 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 1,324 45,557 138,030 954 32,160 1,697 58,713 182,089 1,209 40,544 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 1,136 78,085 261,619 866 56,674 1,497 102,811 350,759 1,115 73,625 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1,560 246,011 884,899 1,236 185,125 1,739 268,060 1,020,820 1,365 198,978 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 703 241,035 887,226 583 188,688 754 256,636 982,547 647 200,914 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 417 278,509 1,097,826 351 212,902 468 303,021 1,202,044 390 226,323 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 255 481,292 1,979,799 233 393,403 241 464,624 1,951,440 210 363,680 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 184 241,511 1,001,519 166 196,885 171 233,880 959,077 144 167,362 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 38 89,085 348,485 35 71,376 44 102,463 419,407 41 79,914 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 25 95,613 399,812 24 (D) 19 68,879 296,451 18 (D) 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 8 55,083 229,983 8 (D) 7 59,402 276,505 7 (D) : Hay - All hay including alfalfa and other : dry (tons, dry) .........................................: 9,537 1,298,726 4,508,664 7,587 1,001,236 11,432 1,414,995 5,235,391 8,752 1,061,061 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 3,426 22,745 54,280 2,816 17,953 4,034 26,853 71,133 3,117 20,162 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 1,011 18,621 51,936 748 13,611 1,297 24,045 68,236 883 16,234 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 1,257 43,188 132,533 935 31,624 1,605 55,653 174,057 1,178 39,696 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 1,086 74,371 240,153 826 53,834 1,426 98,180 334,411 1,080 71,673 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 1,470 231,937 791,402 1,175 176,105 1,689 260,377 957,382 1,328 193,050 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 682 234,425 840,523 568 183,906 715 242,426 889,159 609 188,099 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 388 258,433 885,844 323 193,665 455 297,024 1,151,846 376 220,818 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 217 415,006 1,511,993 196 330,538 211 410,437 1,589,167 181 311,329 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 155 203,917 787,096 138 162,659 147 200,271 746,827 121 135,589 2,000 to 2,999 acres .................................: 33 78,467 275,163 30 60,811 43 101,050 395,592 40 78,501 3,000 to 4,999 acres .................................: 22 84,389 298,543 21 (D) 15 57,014 221,327 14 (D) 5,000 acres or more ..................................: 7 48,233 151,191 7 (D) 6 52,102 225,421 6 (D) : Alfalfa hay (tons, dry) ................................: 7,480 1,047,568 3,926,331 6,466 870,101 9,039 1,133,062 4,561,851 7,696 918,373 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 2,425 16,076 44,133 2,146 14,087 2,945 19,651 60,955 2,546 16,914 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 821 15,089 48,605 694 12,680 982 18,335 62,353 803 14,860 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 1,042 36,152 125,642 871 29,672 1,305 45,628 163,250 1,102 37,522 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 862 59,256 215,327 730 48,433 1,228 84,068 317,744 1,016 67,276 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 1,283 200,696 750,569 1,102 166,431 1,456 222,315 904,754 1,236 180,189 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 559 190,764 732,494 485 159,464 610 209,668 837,903 534 171,513 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 319 211,090 790,550 280 173,836 356 231,745 976,235 312 184,406 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 169 318,445 1,219,011 158 265,498 157 301,652 1,238,657 147 245,693 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...............................: 123 164,246 689,142 115 139,691 106 141,877 565,811 98 111,104 2,000 to 2,999 acres ...............................: 25 60,177 201,636 22 46,248 34 78,131 317,076 33 (D) 3,000 to 4,999 acres ...............................: 17 66,189 245,917 17 54,876 12 45,714 211,835 11 (D) 5,000 acres or more ................................: 4 27,833 82,316 4 24,683 5 35,930 143,935 5 28,853 : Other dry hay (tons, dry) ..............................: 3,303 251,158 582,333 1,993 131,135 3,787 281,933 673,540 2,048 142,688 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 1,343 8,782 15,482 915 5,368 1,584 10,486 17,897 950 5,703 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 383 7,061 15,062 193 3,493 514 9,472 18,074 214 3,881 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 571 19,923 41,132 328 11,149 606 20,727 37,792 292 9,649 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 441 30,317 64,615 228 14,431 466 31,234 62,438 249 15,734 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 338 49,775 116,426 197 27,725 369 53,335 117,153 194 25,353 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 136 45,555 104,395 74 22,509 151 49,490 106,519 107 32,584 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 65 42,974 94,324 44 22,995 54 36,216 100,604 22 13,214 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 26 46,771 130,897 14 23,465 43 70,973 213,063 20 36,570 : All haylage, grass silage, and greenchop : (tons, green) ...........................................: 1,337 177,736 1,724,698 984 160,579 1,409 141,896 1,209,568 902 127,947 1 to 14 acres ..........................................: 482 3,257 7,983 331 2,038 634 3,782 8,622 351 1,841 15 to 24 acres .........................................: 137 2,523 9,353 67 (D) 144 2,690 7,361 61 (D) 25 to 49 acres .........................................: 199 7,114 39,325 134 4,622 183 6,313 31,690 114 3,879 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 152 10,441 76,907 123 8,218 173 12,210 80,252 120 8,609 100 to 249 acres .......................................: 200 31,088 287,643 172 26,166 151 22,766 200,470 134 19,925 250 to 499 acres .......................................: 84 28,200 300,829 76 25,649 71 24,837 234,867 69 (D) 500 to 999 acres .......................................: 45 29,129 326,140 45 29,129 23 14,630 151,267 23 14,630 1,000 acres or more ....................................: 38 65,984 676,518 36 (D) 30 54,668 495,039 30 54,668 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 35. Specified Crops by Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Irrigated land : : : : Irrigated land : : : :-----------------------: : : :---------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD AND GRASS SEEDS, FORAGE, AND HAY - Con. : : All haylage, grass silage, and greenchop : (tons, green) - Con. : : Haylage or greenchop from alfalfa or alfalfa : mixtures (tons, green) ................................: 527 111,950 1,258,964 518 111,495 566 98,825 934,417 490 96,663 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 84 529 1,883 82 (D) 118 622 2,437 79 (D) 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 28 509 2,260 24 431 52 997 4,068 35 648 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 72 2,588 20,777 71 (D) 102 3,482 22,026 92 3,175 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 88 5,987 64,296 86 (D) 99 7,139 69,223 91 6,536 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 144 22,075 258,519 144 21,945 108 16,518 175,739 106 (D) 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 63 22,908 265,968 63 22,908 45 15,469 166,897 45 15,046 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 28 19,144 191,234 28 19,144 18 11,702 127,611 18 11,702 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 20 38,210 454,027 20 38,210 24 42,896 366,416 24 42,896 : All other haylage, grass silage, and : greenchop (tons, green) ...............................: 902 65,786 465,734 555 49,084 909 43,071 275,151 471 31,284 1 to 14 acres ........................................: 417 2,778 6,356 268 1,561 532 3,198 6,314 285 1,417 15 to 24 acres .......................................: 110 2,049 7,237 44 (D) 96 1,765 3,758 27 519 25 to 49 acres .......................................: 137 4,942 19,678 73 2,500 93 3,269 12,323 34 1,142 50 to 99 acres .......................................: 85 5,931 22,943 56 3,699 85 5,847 19,564 41 2,921 100 to 249 acres .....................................: 82 13,134 65,999 53 8,176 64 9,041 37,416 49 6,500 250 to 499 acres .....................................: 46 14,360 156,110 38 12,179 25 8,483 73,687 21 7,317 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 16 10,157 92,621 16 10,157 9 5,868 70,089 9 5,868 1,000 acres or more ..................................: 9 12,435 94,790 7 (D) 5 5,600 52,000 5 5,600 : OTHER SPECIFIED CROPS : : Land in vegetables .......................................: 1,235 334,276 (X) 1,232 334,263 1,209 353,680 (X) 1,061 345,668 0.1 to 0.9 acres .......................................: 264 114 (X) 262 (D) 296 120 (X) 196 75 1.0 to 4.9 acres .......................................: 263 445 (X) 262 (D) 208 335 (X) 164 252 5.0 to 14.9 acres ......................................: 58 502 (X) 58 502 47 437 (X) 43 403 15.0 to 24.9 acres .....................................: 68 1,215 (X) 68 1,215 24 464 (X) 24 410 25.0 to 49.9 acres .....................................: 65 2,390 (X) 65 2,390 75 2,631 (X) 75 2,611 50.0 to 99.9 acres .....................................: 129 8,869 (X) 129 8,869 85 5,982 (X) 85 5,964 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...................................: 132 21,308 (X) 132 21,308 189 30,534 (X) 189 29,624 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...................................: 82 29,735 (X) 82 29,735 104 38,324 (X) 104 36,812 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...................................: 60 36,232 (X) 60 36,232 54 32,943 (X) 54 31,392 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...................................: 33 29,100 (X) 33 29,100 47 39,563 (X) 47 37,603 1,000.0 acres or more ..................................: 81 204,366 (X) 81 204,366 80 202,348 (X) 80 200,523 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres .............................: 53 71,293 (X) 53 71,293 55 74,486 (X) 55 73,164 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres .............................: 11 26,811 (X) 11 26,811 6 13,949 (X) 6 13,772 3,000.0 to 4,999.9 acres .............................: 8 32,742 (X) 8 32,742 7 25,822 (X) 7 25,496 5,000.0 acres or more ................................: 9 73,520 (X) 9 73,520 12 88,091 (X) 12 88,091 : Land in orchards .........................................: 567 5,523 (X) 565 (D) 576 5,708 (X) 392 5,139 : Land in berries ..........................................: 268 207 (X) 268 207 287 243 (X) 194 164 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 36. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vegetables harvested for sale ....................: 1,235 337,060 1,071 191,873 346 145,188 1,209 354,278 976 204,072 402 150,206 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 247 107 240 101 25 6 283 125 260 118 27 7 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 261 434 260 (D) 28 (D) 221 403 207 373 23 30 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 77 648 67 533 23 115 47 441 39 356 10 86 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 61 1,095 60 (D) 1 (D) 21 408 14 208 12 200 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 71 2,626 53 1,889 20 738 78 2,733 53 1,697 35 1,036 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 122 8,288 104 6,719 32 1,569 85 5,998 62 4,257 31 1,741 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 137 21,898 97 14,307 61 7,591 188 30,668 119 18,055 96 12,613 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 82 29,684 60 17,853 42 11,831 105 38,649 82 25,235 54 13,413 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...........................: 63 38,287 52 26,789 26 11,498 54 32,943 48 21,185 30 11,757 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...........................: 32 28,140 16 9,312 28 18,828 47 39,563 35 22,398 26 17,165 1,000.0 acres or more ..........................: 82 205,854 62 112,867 60 92,987 80 202,348 57 110,190 58 92,157 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres .....................: 54 72,330 40 39,242 40 33,088 55 74,486 37 41,568 36 32,918 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres .....................: 11 26,811 7 9,569 10 17,242 6 13,949 6 8,739 5 5,210 3,000.0 to 4,999.9 acres .....................: 8 32,742 7 20,834 5 11,908 7 25,822 4 10,061 6 15,761 5,000.0 acres or more ........................: 9 73,972 8 43,222 5 30,750 12 88,091 10 49,822 11 38,269 : Artichokes (excluding Jerusalem) .................: 7 1 7 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - : Asparagus, bearing age ...........................: 45 87 45 87 - - 21 (D) 21 (D) - - : Beans, lima ......................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - : Beans, snap (bush and pole) ......................: 195 5,237 183 4,470 19 767 126 593 113 86 14 507 : Beets ............................................: 91 25 91 25 - - 95 15 94 (D) 1 (D) : Broccoli .........................................: 58 12 58 12 - - 35 6 35 6 - - : Brussels sprouts .................................: 17 2 17 2 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - : Cabbage, Chinese (nappa, bok choy, etc.) .........: 22 4 22 4 - - 19 2 19 2 - - : Cabbage, head ....................................: 66 16 64 16 3 (Z) 52 (D) 52 (D) - - : Cabbage, mustard .................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) : Cantaloupes and muskmelons .......................: 59 (D) 59 (D) - - 65 39 65 (D) 1 (D) : Carrots ..........................................: 235 3,668 217 2,834 18 834 94 106 89 18 7 88 : Cauliflower ......................................: 21 5 21 5 - - 21 3 21 3 - - : Celery ...........................................: 15 2 15 2 - - 8 1 8 1 - - : Chicory ..........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) : Collards .........................................: 19 76 18 (D) 1 (D) 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - : Cucumbers and pickles ............................: 151 40 147 39 4 1 96 18 95 (D) 1 (D) : Daikon ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - : Eggplant .........................................: 34 7 34 7 - - 24 3 24 3 - - : Escarole and endive ..............................: 11 1 11 1 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : Garlic ...........................................: 132 52 128 49 10 3 96 63 93 63 3 (Z) : Ginger root ......................................: - - - - - - 6 1 6 1 - - : Gourds (see text) ................................: 10 2 9 (D) 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Herbs, fresh cut .................................: 93 190 93 190 (X) (X) 63 11 63 11 (X) (X) : Honeydew melons ..................................: 17 3 17 3 - - 14 3 14 3 (X) (X) : Horseradish ......................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) : Kale .............................................: 54 158 54 (D) 1 (D) 43 5 43 (D) 2 (D) : Lettuce, all .....................................: 142 681 142 681 (X) (X) 101 76 101 76 (X) (X) : Lettuce, head ..................................: 57 49 57 49 (X) (X) 40 22 40 22 (X) (X) : Lettuce, leaf ..................................: 114 546 114 546 (X) (X) 74 32 74 32 (X) (X) : Lettuce, romaine ...............................: 32 87 32 87 (X) (X) 30 22 30 22 (X) (X) : Mustard greens ...................................: 22 2 21 (D) 1 (D) 15 4 15 (D) 2 (D) : Okra .............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 11 1 11 1 - - : Onions, dry ......................................: 201 14,522 191 12,596 23 1,926 165 12,452 148 10,341 24 2,111 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 97 14 97 14 - - 75 (D) 73 (D) 2 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 5 13 5 13 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 7 55 7 55 - - 4 33 1 (D) 3 (D) 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 10 184 10 184 - - 6 116 6 (D) 2 (D) 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 29 1,058 24 842 5 216 14 467 14 467 - - 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 10 705 10 (D) 1 (D) 15 1,194 14 1,100 3 94 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 22 3,004 18 2,287 13 717 37 5,677 28 4,450 10 1,227 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 17 6,202 16 (D) 2 (D) 8 2,339 6 1,610 4 729 500.0 acres or more ............................: 4 3,286 4 (D) 2 (D) 4 2,614 4 2,614 - - : Onions, green ....................................: 72 10 71 (D) 1 (D) 38 5 36 (D) 2 (D) : Parsley ..........................................: 29 3 29 3 - - 16 2 14 (D) 2 (D) : Parsnips (see text) ..............................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 36. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Peas, Chinese (sugar, snow) ......................: 56 712 56 712 - - 42 1,193 34 135 9 1,058 : Peas, green ......................................: 105 1,972 101 1,782 4 190 38 24 38 24 - - : Peas, southern (cowpeas) - : blackeyed, crowder, etc. ........................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : Peppers, Bell (excluding pimientos) ..............: 116 321 111 26 7 295 91 456 82 18 10 438 : Peppers, other than Bell (including chile) .......: 115 22 110 21 9 2 82 17 80 (D) 2 (D) : Potatoes .........................................: 529 301,157 400 161,609 220 139,548 684 335,042 500 190,521 317 144,521 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 115 24 111 23 4 (Z) 120 20 115 19 7 2 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 3 5 3 5 - - 18 32 11 17 7 14 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 14 147 14 147 - - 19 200 14 144 7 56 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 6 120 6 120 - - 10 188 3 39 9 149 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 27 960 20 685 7 275 36 1,346 17 543 24 803 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 63 4,352 50 3,152 25 1,199 68 4,731 49 3,322 25 1,409 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 78 12,627 44 6,925 39 5,702 146 24,365 90 13,872 79 10,493 250.0 to 499.9 acres ...........................: 57 20,547 33 9,296 35 11,252 94 35,048 68 22,211 50 12,836 500.0 to 749.9 acres ...........................: 55 32,855 44 22,230 24 10,625 48 29,197 43 18,815 27 10,383 750.0 to 999.9 acres ...........................: 31 27,303 15 8,475 28 18,828 45 37,860 33 21,349 24 16,511 1,000.0 acres or more ..........................: 80 202,218 60 110,552 58 91,666 80 202,056 57 110,190 58 91,865 1,000.0 to 1,999.9 acres .....................: 52 70,293 39 38,274 38 32,019 55 74,486 37 41,568 36 32,918 2,000.0 to 2,999.9 acres .....................: 11 26,811 7 9,569 10 17,242 6 13,949 6 8,739 5 5,210 3,000.0 acres or more ........................: 17 105,114 14 62,709 10 42,405 19 113,621 14 59,884 17 53,738 : Pumpkins .........................................: 155 294 149 278 19 16 176 1,243 176 1,202 11 41 : Radishes .........................................: 73 1,917 70 1,917 4 (Z) 45 6 45 6 - - : Rhubarb ..........................................: 40 5 33 4 8 1 15 2 12 2 3 (Z) : Spinach ..........................................: 46 6 44 (D) 2 (D) 55 8 55 8 - - : Squash, all (including : zucchini) (see text) ............................: 174 85 170 (D) 7 (D) 195 148 178 142 19 6 : Sweet corn (see text) ............................: 221 3,282 210 2,939 19 344 155 2,121 146 921 15 1,200 0.1 to 0.9 acres ...............................: 106 23 101 23 5 1 95 20 94 (D) 3 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 34 61 34 61 - - 22 44 22 44 - - 5.0 to 14.9 acres ..............................: 29 240 26 192 11 48 10 88 10 (D) 2 (D) 15.0 to 24.9 acres .............................: 16 275 16 275 - - 4 64 4 64 - - 25.0 to 49.9 acres .............................: 17 620 17 620 - - 15 519 12 414 5 105 50.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 12 874 10 (D) 2 (D) 4 298 4 298 - - 100.0 acres or more ............................: 7 1,189 6 (D) 1 (D) 5 1,089 - - 5 1,089 : Sweet potatoes ...................................: 10 1 10 1 - - - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open .............................: 215 62 207 59 16 3 211 72 196 65 20 7 : Turnip greens ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 9 1 9 1 - - : Turnips ..........................................: 47 1,578 44 978 3 600 26 213 23 3 3 210 : Watercress .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) : Watermelons ......................................: 74 108 74 108 - - 72 133 72 (D) 2 (D) : Other vegetables .................................: 37 698 35 (D) 2 (D) 55 82 52 82 4 1 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 37. Specified Fruits and Nuts by Acres: 2022 and 2017 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres :Nonbearing age acres: Total : Bearing age acres :Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Noncitrus fruit, all .............................: 554 5,483 448 5,003 270 480 552 5,634 411 4,996 281 638 : Apples .........................................: 320 1,936 245 1,695 140 241 371 2,256 258 1,942 191 313 0.1 to 0.9 acres .............................: 220 65 159 45 86 20 249 (D) 153 (D) 124 (D) 1.0 to 4.9 acres .............................: 84 152 70 110 45 41 90 182 75 125 47 57 5.0 to 14.9 acres ............................: 11 81 11 73 4 8 19 111 17 61 13 51 15.0 to 24.9 acres ...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 7 120 7 116 3 4 25.0 to 49.9 acres ...........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 50.0 to 99.9 acres ...........................: - - - - - - - - - - - - 100.0 acres or more ..........................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) 4 1,708 4 (D) 3 (D) : Apricots .......................................: 77 68 49 52 34 16 75 49 55 44 24 5 : Cherries, sweet ................................: 149 624 99 571 67 54 173 572 107 540 86 32 : Cherries, tart .................................: 61 15 46 (D) 21 (D) 68 12 38 (D) 33 (D) : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ........: 137 1,175 122 1,114 45 61 128 1,216 91 1,106 58 111 : Nectarines .....................................: 34 67 16 59 21 8 30 60 19 (D) 11 (D) : Pawpaws (see text) .............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Peaches, all ...................................: 132 1,009 84 965 57 44 87 914 59 848 43 66 : Peaches, clingstone ..........................: 50 69 30 66 21 3 30 (D) 20 (D) 11 3 : Peaches, freestone ...........................: 106 940 75 899 39 41 68 (D) 49 (D) 34 63 : Pears, all .....................................: 183 207 122 177 87 30 143 186 91 145 71 41 : Pears, Bartlett ..............................: 102 172 70 151 52 21 67 144 42 113 32 31 : Pears, other than Bartlett ...................: 120 35 75 27 59 9 105 43 66 33 50 10 : Persimmons .....................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Plumcots, pluots, and other plum-apricot : hybrids .......................................: 22 10 15 (D) 9 (D) 8 (D) 2 (D) 6 (D) : Plums and prunes ...............................: 158 370 92 352 77 18 120 364 86 310 43 53 : Plums ........................................: 148 344 83 327 75 17 114 349 82 (D) 40 (D) : Prunes .......................................: 25 26 20 25 7 1 21 15 15 (D) 6 (D) : Other noncitrus fruit (see text) ...............: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Nuts, all ........................................: 52 40 37 23 24 17 67 74 32 29 36 45 : Almonds ........................................: 8 2 7 2 3 (Z) - - - - - - : Chestnuts ......................................: 7 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) 6 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) : Hazelnuts (Filberts) ...........................: 28 10 18 5 16 5 26 21 10 4 16 17 : Pecans, all ....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : Pecans, improved .............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : Walnuts, English ...............................: 22 19 19 16 5 3 47 29 26 8 22 21 : Other nuts .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 38. Berries by Acres: 2022 and 2017 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres :Nonbearing age acres: Total : Bearing age acres :Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Berries, all (see text) ..........................: 268 207 239 182 52 25 (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Aronia berries ...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : Blackberries and dewberries (including : marionberries) ..................................: 71 31 68 23 10 7 82 26 54 21 29 4 : Blueberries, all .................................: 64 47 51 36 19 12 74 65 50 56 27 8 : Blueberries, tame ..............................: 63 (D) 50 (D) 19 12 74 65 50 56 27 8 : Blueberries, wild ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : Boysenberries ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Currants (black or red) ..........................: 10 2 10 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Elderberries .....................................: 24 3 17 3 7 1 5 (D) 1 (D) 4 (Z) : Gooseberries (see text) ..........................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Mulberries (see text) ............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Raspberries, all .................................: 131 82 122 78 15 4 149 98 127 82 42 16 : Strawberries .....................................: 78 32 72 30 10 1 97 36 80 31 25 5 : Other berries (see text) .........................: 6 6 6 6 - - 5 8 1 (D) 4 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 39. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- :Under glass or other protection: In the open : Value of sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Crop : Farms : Square feet : Farms : Acres : Farms : Dollars --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FLORICULTURE AND BEDDING CROPS : : Bedding/Garden plants, cut flowers and cut florist greens, foliage : plants, potted flowering plants, and other floriculture and bedding : crops, total .........................................................2022: 233 2,331,210 199 302 319 25,465,355 2017: 179 2,362,189 104 82 243 13,539,383 : Bedding/Garden plants - annuals, herbaceous perennials, vegetable : plants (include hanging baskets) ...................................2022: 187 1,996,936 97 82 224 20,825,741 2017: 144 1,965,175 39 28 169 10,641,747 : Cut flowers and cut florist greens ..................................2022: 42 54,024 105 131 120 1,847,222 2017: 21 17,132 51 34 54 250,404 : Foliage plants, indoor (include hanging baskets) ....................2022: 21 56,728 9 3 25 411,436 2017: 24 125,702 2 (D) 24 501,899 : Potted flowering plants .............................................2022: 32 222,690 27 61 55 2,313,290 2017: 27 227,074 11 10 34 1,930,444 : Other floriculture and bedding crops ................................2022: 8 832 6 25 10 67,666 2017: 10 27,106 11 (D) 19 214,889 : NURSERY CROPS : : Nursery stock crops ...................................................2022: 58 504,524 212 5,242 230 74,525,574 2017: 43 495,117 191 4,297 206 39,373,155 : Aquatic plants ........................................................2022: 4 10,000 1 (D) 5 72,500 2017: - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : PROPAGATIVE MATERIALS SOLD : : Bulbs, corms, rhizomes, and tubers - dry ..............................2022: 7 9,140 12 5 15 (D) 2017: - - 14 9 14 40,750 : Cuttings, seedlings, liners, and plugs ................................2022: 12 22,329 13 7 21 578,727 2017: 11 90,085 14 256 23 2,342,177 : Flower seeds ..........................................................2022: 1 (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) 2017: 2 (D) 7 493 7 398,652 : SOD : : Sod harvested or intended for sale in : future years (see text) ..............................................2022: (X) (X) 24 3,414 24 19,191,890 2017: (X) (X) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : FOOD CROPS GROWN UNDER GLASS OR OTHER PROTECTION : : Total greenhouse vegetables and fresh cut herbs .......................2022: 196 548,966 (X) (X) 196 2,172,371 2017: 115 356,096 (X) (X) 113 1,331,561 : Greenhouse tomatoes .................................................2022: 138 245,885 (X) (X) 138 1,357,494 2017: 97 124,932 (X) (X) 95 882,809 : Other greenhouse vegetables and fresh cut herbs .....................2022: 133 303,081 (X) (X) 133 814,877 2017: 72 231,164 (X) (X) 70 448,752 : Vegetable seeds (see text) ............................................2022: 19 25,891 (X) (X) 19 105,036 2017: 6 6,800 (X) (X) 160 20,325,369 : Vegetable transplants to farm fields ..................................2022: 26 74,667 (X) (X) 26 86,961 2017: 19 18,051 (X) (X) 24 144,128 : Greenhouse fruits and berries .........................................2022: 16 7,786 (X) (X) 9 1,812 2017: 11 2,082 (X) (X) 11 (D) : MUSHROOM CROPS : : Mushrooms .............................................................2022: 3 5,050 (X) (X) 3 151,470 2017: - - (X) (X) - - --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 40. Woodland Crops Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Acres in production : Trees cut : Irrigated : Value :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: of sales Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Number : Farms : Acres : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cultivated Christmas trees .............................2022: 101 746 47 15,980 51 153 673 2017: 120 728 52 31,811 49 94 (D) 2022 farms by acres in production: : 1 to 2 acres ...........................................: 48 83 20 1,288 30 44 35 3 to 4 acres ...........................................: 17 55 8 408 10 30 16 5 to 9 acres ...........................................: 17 105 8 1,580 5 (D) 90 10 to 19 acres .........................................: 16 186 8 1,620 5 44 119 20 to 49 acres .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (D) 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 100 acres or more ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (D) : 2017 farms by acres in production: : 1 to 2 acres ...........................................: 70 102 18 513 33 41 12 3 to 4 acres ...........................................: 21 68 14 (D) 10 (D) 43 5 to 9 acres ...........................................: 19 120 10 (D) 5 21 (D) 10 to 19 acres .........................................: 5 65 5 2,737 1 (D) 56 20 to 49 acres .........................................: 3 (D) 3 1,405 - - 25 50 to 99 acres .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (D) 100 acres or more ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Acres in production : Harvested : Irrigated : Value :-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: of sales Crop : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Short rotation woody crops .............................2022: - - - - - - - 2017: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 41. Farms by Concentration of Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Fewest number of farms accounting for- : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : All farms : 10 percent of sales : 25 percent of sales : 50 percent of sales :75 percent of sales -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ................................................number: 22,877 6 27 129 572 percent: 100.0 (Z) 0.1 0.6 2.5 Land in farms .........................................acres: 11,547,963 25,240 236,201 818,917 2,475,933 Average size of farm ..............................acres: 505 4,207 8,748 6,348 4,329 Estimated market value of land and buildings ..........farms: 22,877 6 27 129 572 $1,000: 48,610,483 131,272 1,378,023 4,811,372 13,332,482 Average per farm ................................dollars: 2,124,863 21,878,645 51,037,906 37,297,460 23,308,535 Average per acre ................................dollars: 4,209 5,201 5,834 5,875 5,385 Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...........................................$1,000: 4,930,153 21,800 143,061 569,843 1,654,133 percent: 100.0 0.4 2.9 11.6 33.6 Land in farms according to use: : Total cropland ......................................acres: 5,623,516 (D) 217,932 706,527 1,932,266 Harvested cropland ................................acres: 4,370,363 (D) 192,698 646,099 1,755,459 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ............acres: 5,227,379 (D) 6,718 87,503 495,908 : Market value of agricultural products sold ...........$1,000: 10,892,201 1,163,216 2,741,224 5,454,799 8,174,329 Average per farm ................................dollars: 476,120 193,869,324 101,526,812 42,285,260 14,290,785 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ...........................................farms: 3,530 1 13 69 404 $1,000: 1,626,831 (D) 60,137 248,497 756,570 Tobacco .............................................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ...............................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and : sweet potatoes .....................................farms: 1,231 - 3 35 217 $1,000: 1,597,035 - 112,123 572,247 1,330,297 Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ......................farms: 561 - - 1 2 $1,000: 31,693 - - (D) (D) Fruits and tree nuts ..............................farms: 446 - - 1 2 $1,000: 29,683 - - (D) (D) Berries ...........................................farms: 234 - - - - $1,000: 2,010 - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ................................................farms: 599 - - 2 8 $1,000: 122,254 - - (D) 36,585 Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops ........................................farms: 47 - - - - $1,000: 673 - - - - Cultivated Christmas trees ........................farms: 47 - - - - $1,000: 673 - - - - Short rotation woody crops ........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Other crops and hay .................................farms: 7,813 1 5 47 319 $1,000: 1,386,308 (D) (D) 214,005 646,565 Maple syrup .......................................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Cattle and calves ...................................farms: 7,630 6 24 95 278 $1,000: 2,175,548 497,671 795,037 1,383,374 1,674,015 Milk from cows ......................................farms: 330 4 20 70 176 $1,000: 3,727,378 662,522 1,747,262 2,934,946 3,605,036 Hogs and pigs .......................................farms: 663 - - 2 3 $1,000: 23,779 - - (D) (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, : and milk ...........................................farms: 1,454 - - 2 10 $1,000: 46,709 - - (D) 17,774 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys ........................................farms: 1,028 1 1 2 10 $1,000: 12,951 (D) (D) (D) 119 Poultry and eggs ....................................farms: 1,751 - - 2 4 $1,000: 40,298 - - (D) (D) Aquaculture .........................................farms: 51 - - 1 2 $1,000: 76,464 - - (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products ...........................................farms: 585 - 1 2 3 $1,000: 24,281 - (D) (D) 1,072 Value of organically produced : commodities ..........................................farms: 227 - 2 7 27 $1,000: 166,224 - (D) 81,175 119,330 Value of landlords' share of : total sales ..........................................farms: 719 - - 5 72 $1,000: 99,099 - - 1,631 37,793 Total farm production expenses ........................farms: 22,877 6 27 129 572 $1,000: 9,317,904 1,014,830 2,332,779 4,607,982 6,849,032 Selected farm production expenses: : Fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners purchased .............................farms: 9,896 3 21 110 513 $1,000: 765,559 (D) 51,636 193,857 447,994 Chemicals purchased .................................farms: 10,419 3 22 112 512 $1,000: 410,258 (D) 47,962 144,368 271,278 Livestock and poultry purchased : or leased ..........................................farms: 6,503 3 15 58 171 $1,000: 722,700 (D) 312,643 533,492 610,291 Feed purchased ......................................farms: 13,525 6 24 96 279 $1,000: 2,598,813 574,233 1,232,682 2,009,146 2,380,611 Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased .................farms: 21,557 6 27 129 572 $1,000: 395,457 13,154 49,339 117,818 226,361 Utilities ...........................................farms: 15,852 6 27 129 572 $1,000: 357,174 17,865 46,283 116,536 228,132 Hired farm labor ....................................farms: 5,697 6 27 129 564 $1,000: 1,043,118 65,835 156,834 427,632 748,286 Interest expense ....................................farms: 6,805 5 22 107 450 $1,000: 286,045 23,640 57,185 111,695 175,266 Government payments ...................................farms: 4,296 1 15 82 297 $1,000: 132,405 (D) 2,695 9,558 31,100 Inventory of selected livestock: : Cattle and calves ...................................farms: 8,956 6 24 96 276 number: 2,517,987 430,936 838,303 1,446,227 1,801,282 Milk cows .........................................farms: 549 4 20 71 173 number: 664,479 135,000 337,834 525,765 639,782 Hogs and pigs .......................................farms: 562 - - 2 3 number: 21,157 - - (D) (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 42. Commodities Raised and Delivered Under Production Contracts: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commodity : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Broilers and other meat-type chickens ................................: - - - - Eggs, chicken (dozens) ...............................................: 2 (D) - - Layers ...............................................................: - - - - Pullets for laying flock replacement .................................: - - - - Turkeys ..............................................................: - - - - Custom fed cattle shipped directly for slaughter .....................: 6 (D) 10 (D) Hogs and pigs ........................................................: - - - - Replacement dairy heifers ............................................: 12 72,645 23 102,045 Other cattle, sheep, livestock, or poultry ...........................: 23 (X) 34 (X) Grains, oilseeds, vegetables, melons, potatoes, : and other crops .....................................................: 1 (X) - (X) : Value of commodities ($1,000) ........................................: 39 527,312 62 360,245 Total payments received ($1,000) .....................................: 39 51,319 62 47,646 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 43. Value of Land and Buildings: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Value of land and buildings : Farms : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Estimated market value of land and buildings ...............: 22,877 48,610,483 24,996 33,513,086 Average per farm ................................dollars: (X) 2,124,863 (X) 1,340,738 Average per acre ................................dollars: (X) 4,209 (X) 2,866 : By value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..........................................: 1,300 31,525 2,090 45,709 $50,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 1,091 76,913 1,607 114,934 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 1,951 275,336 3,740 541,116 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 5,883 1,972,604 8,497 2,683,453 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 5,555 3,738,485 3,630 2,420,953 $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...............................: 2,930 3,935,677 1,970 2,702,598 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...............................: 2,186 6,645,095 2,051 6,207,471 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...............................: 969 6,705,689 846 5,800,423 $10,000,000 or more ....................................: 1,012 25,229,157 565 12,996,427 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 44. Value of Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Value of machinery and equipment : Farms : Value ($1,000) : Farms : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Estimated market value of machinery and equipment ..........: 22,877 4,930,153 24,995 4,397,906 Average per farm ................................dollars: (X) 215,507 (X) 175,951 : By value group: : $1 to $4,999 ...........................................: 1,609 4,512 2,276 6,307 $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................: 1,735 11,851 2,270 15,280 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................: 2,733 36,705 3,416 46,658 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................: 2,180 50,481 3,031 70,045 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................: 2,925 109,560 3,294 122,792 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................: 2,319 129,488 2,405 135,110 $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................: 1,815 145,761 1,691 136,332 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................: 3,057 401,242 2,501 329,608 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................: 2,429 711,183 2,171 643,542 $500,000 to $999,999 ...................................: 962 641,343 1,006 670,685 $1,000,000 or more .....................................: 1,113 2,688,027 934 2,221,549 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 45. Selected Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Manufactured : Manufactured : : Manufactured : Total : 2018 to 2022 : prior to 2018 : Total : 2013 to 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected machinery and equipment : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Trucks, including pickups ......................................: 18,416 54,948 4,515 6,907 16,865 48,041 20,364 58,808 4,372 7,133 : Tractors .......................................................: 16,968 42,226 3,130 5,148 15,277 37,078 18,705 46,081 2,891 5,237 2 or 3 .......................................................: 5,393 12,588 524 1,195 4,936 11,550 5,940 14,033 595 1,359 4 or more ....................................................: 3,261 21,324 210 1,557 2,946 18,133 3,649 22,932 246 1,828 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ................................: 7,400 9,283 1,143 1,226 6,389 8,057 8,269 10,659 833 949 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ....................................: 9,749 14,421 1,237 1,415 8,751 13,006 11,040 16,772 1,153 1,424 100 horsepower (PTO) or more .................................: 6,684 18,522 1,120 2,507 6,243 16,015 7,196 18,650 1,324 2,864 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ........................: 2,292 3,237 318 418 2,043 2,819 2,732 3,743 341 485 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ...................: - - - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ..............................: 2,307 2,680 250 311 2,084 2,369 2,580 2,986 320 374 Hay balers .....................................................: 6,213 7,569 636 719 5,724 6,850 7,454 8,942 839 978 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 46. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2022 : 2017 :: Item : 2022 : 2017 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Any fertilizer, manure, or chemicals : :: Chemical expenses ...........................farms: 10,419 12,014 used .......................................farms: 11,053 12,674 :: $1,000: 410,258 286,983 : :: : Any fertilizer or chemical expenses .........farms: 12,452 14,296 :: Acres treated to control- : $1,000: 1,175,817 793,936 :: Insects ...................................farms: 2,975 3,243 : :: acres: 1,304,919 1,760,905 Commercial fertilizer, lime, : :: Weeds, grass, or brush ....................farms: 8,233 9,399 and soil conditioners used .................farms: 8,673 10,150 :: acres: 3,216,414 3,775,387 acres treated: 3,496,612 3,498,515 :: Nematodes .................................farms: 714 481 : :: acres: 311,847 293,632 Manure used .................................farms: 3,432 4,007 :: Diseases in crops and orchards ............farms: 1,321 1,511 acres treated: 331,595 348,931 :: acres: 759,333 1,050,024 : :: : Organic fertilizer used .....................farms: 497 582 :: Chemicals used to control growth, thin : acres treated: 55,232 78,542 :: fruit, ripen, or defoliate .................farms: 877 571 : :: acres on which used: 305,558 273,772 Commercial fertilizer, lime, and : :: : soil conditioners expenses .................farms: 9,896 11,728 :: : $1,000: 765,559 506,953 :: : --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 47. Land Use Practices: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land use practices : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile .................................................: 405 74,786 522 76,176 Average per farm .................................................: (X) 185 (X) 146 : Acres drained: : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 133 557 174 646 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 120 2,762 141 3,303 50 to 99 acres ...................................................: 47 3,008 53 3,645 100 to 199 acres .................................................: 28 4,029 59 7,257 : 200 to 499 acres .................................................: 32 8,965 44 14,440 500 to 999 acres .................................................: 28 18,317 41 28,390 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................................: 6 7,731 6 7,595 2,000 acres or more ..............................................: 11 29,417 4 10,900 : Land artificially drained by ditches .................................: 2,229 217,276 1,998 197,068 Average per farm .................................................: (X) 97 (X) 99 : Acres drained by ditches: : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 974 4,395 874 3,766 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 689 14,954 624 13,829 50 to 99 acres ...................................................: 176 11,786 154 10,558 100 to 199 acres .................................................: 153 20,613 141 19,568 : 200 to 499 acres .................................................: 122 37,403 100 29,265 500 to 999 acres .................................................: 49 32,636 50 33,820 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................................: 55 65,751 45 57,928 2,000 acres or more ..............................................: 11 29,738 10 28,334 : Land under conservation easement .....................................: 427 166,621 324 165,194 Average per farm .................................................: (X) 390 (X) 510 : Acres under easement: : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 62 316 69 246 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 124 3,196 56 1,604 50 to 99 acres ...................................................: 60 4,381 32 2,408 100 to 199 acres .................................................: 54 7,097 58 8,818 : 200 to 499 acres .................................................: 78 23,917 42 14,131 500 to 999 acres .................................................: 18 11,232 25 16,888 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................................: 14 19,033 18 24,257 2,000 acres or more ..............................................: 17 97,449 24 96,842 : Cropland on which no-till practices were used ........................: 1,798 641,103 1,216 513,984 Average per farm .................................................: (X) 357 (X) 423 : No-till practices used: : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 611 1,952 351 1,143 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 369 8,920 275 6,553 50 to 99 acres ...................................................: 207 14,348 137 9,308 100 to 199 acres .................................................: 168 23,927 82 11,392 : 200 to 499 acres .................................................: 198 65,562 143 45,234 500 to 999 acres .................................................: 93 64,061 86 61,771 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................................: 76 106,188 69 96,978 2,000 acres or more ..............................................: 76 356,145 73 281,605 : Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) ...................: 2,102 983,544 1,848 979,587 Average per farm .................................................: (X) 468 (X) 530 : Conservation or reduced tillage used (see text): : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 405 1,586 188 755 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 447 11,533 421 10,937 50 to 99 acres ...................................................: 260 18,007 222 16,285 100 to 199 acres .................................................: 228 33,119 235 33,651 : 200 to 499 acres .................................................: 283 90,454 290 94,177 500 to 999 acres .................................................: 188 137,652 199 146,756 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................................: 162 230,161 172 241,940 2,000 acres or more ..............................................: 129 461,032 121 435,086 : Cropland on which intensive or conventional : tillage practices were used (see text) ..............................: 4,226 1,842,044 4,513 1,992,641 Average per farm .................................................: (X) 436 (X) 442 : Intensive or conventional tillage used (see text): : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 614 2,676 558 2,470 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 987 25,012 992 24,853 50 to 99 acres ...................................................: 625 43,084 627 44,926 100 to 199 acres .................................................: 564 77,060 666 91,875 : 200 to 499 acres .................................................: 649 207,619 772 244,808 500 to 999 acres .................................................: 345 239,074 454 308,605 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................................: 236 335,535 241 337,950 2,000 acres or more ..............................................: 206 911,984 203 937,154 : Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .....................: 1,326 127,777 1,362 128,963 Average per farm .................................................: (X) 96 (X) 95 : Cover crop acres (excluding CRP): : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 438 (D) 445 1,459 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 396 9,761 427 10,385 50 to 99 acres ...................................................: 171 11,368 177 12,052 100 to 199 acres .................................................: 130 17,301 139 18,937 : 200 to 499 acres .................................................: 139 39,511 119 34,085 500 to 999 acres .................................................: 39 27,344 40 25,653 1,000 to 1,999 acres .............................................: 11 14,144 11 14,204 2,000 acres or more ..............................................: 2 (D) 4 12,188 : Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ....................: 2,717 (X) (NA) (X) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 48. Selected Characteristics of Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Estimated market value of : : : : : selected capital assets, : Market value of agricultural : : : : average per farm (dollars) : products sold ($1,000) : : : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Harvested : : : : : Livestock, : :Land in farms : cropland : Land and : Machinery and : : : poultry, and NAICS code (see text) : Farms : (acres) : (acres) : buildings : equipment : Total : Crops : their products ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total ......................................................: 22,877 11,547,963 4,370,363 2,124,863 215,507 10,892,201 4,764,793 6,127,408 : Crop production (111) ......................................: 10,799 6,193,972 3,712,108 2,781,359 303,408 4,734,189 4,620,436 113,753 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .........................: 1,681 2,129,103 1,467,684 4,856,913 537,914 1,022,216 992,408 29,808 Soybean farming (11111) ................................: 3 333 99 267,028 22,229 65 65 - Oilseed (except soybean) farming (11112) ...............: 19 18,124 10,829 3,715,339 180,439 3,771 (D) (D) Dry pea and bean farming (11113) .......................: 19 4,600 3,197 1,290,814 206,318 2,576 (D) (D) Wheat farming (11114) ..................................: 764 1,135,804 786,761 4,777,640 532,329 412,011 405,091 6,920 Corn farming (11115) ...................................: 323 212,531 166,693 4,106,531 558,949 235,522 228,878 6,644 Rice farming (11116) ...................................: - - - - - - - - Other grain farming (11119) ............................: 553 757,711 500,105 5,591,367 559,817 368,271 352,043 16,228 : Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .......................: 767 1,018,856 835,599 7,513,652 918,459 1,898,824 1,891,885 6,939 Potato farming (111211) ................................: 287 920,510 761,380 16,977,867 2,065,603 1,677,561 1,671,886 5,675 Other vegetable (except potato) and melon : farming (111219) ......................................: 480 98,346 74,219 1,854,841 232,562 221,263 219,999 1,264 : Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ........................: 401 16,946 7,358 871,789 53,018 34,730 34,498 232 Orange groves (11131) ..................................: - - - - - - - - Citrus (except orange) groves (11132) ..................: - - - - - - - - Noncitrus fruit and tree nut farming (11133) ...........: 401 16,946 7,358 871,789 53,018 34,730 34,498 232 Apple orchards (111331) ..............................: 105 2,530 417 630,934 44,134 1,877 1,832 45 Grape vineyards (111332) .............................: 62 3,393 984 1,409,032 82,649 4,408 4,405 2 Strawberry farming (111333) ..........................: 21 700 104 524,295 14,750 458 446 13 Berry (except strawberry) farming (111334) ...........: 53 768 152 560,532 41,276 599 590 9 Tree nut farming (111335) ............................: 4 (D) 31 336,250 68,750 25 25 - Fruit and tree nut combination : farming (111336) ....................................: 9 (D) 36 721,942 50,467 144 138 6 Other noncitrus fruit farming (111339) ...............: 147 9,366 5,634 1,002,846 56,295 27,219 27,062 156 : Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .......................................: 555 26,306 13,333 898,339 105,554 124,133 122,850 1,283 Food crops grown under cover (11141) ...................: 63 1,588 101 346,049 59,512 1,933 1,774 159 Nursery and floriculture production (11142) ............: 492 24,718 13,232 969,059 111,449 122,200 121,076 1,124 Nursery and tree production (111421) .................: 314 22,220 12,492 1,199,074 141,300 96,052 (D) (D) Floriculture production (111422) .....................: 178 2,498 740 563,303 58,791 26,148 (D) (D) : Other crop farming (1119) ................................: 7,395 3,002,761 1,388,134 2,063,596 214,735 1,654,286 1,578,795 75,492 Tobacco farming (11191) ................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .................................: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming (11193) ..............................: - - - - - - - - Hay farming (11194) ....................................: 4,842 1,635,520 791,667 1,683,979 175,534 687,172 654,607 32,565 All other crop farming (11199) .........................: 2,553 1,367,241 596,467 2,783,574 289,083 967,114 924,188 42,927 : Animal production and aquaculture (112) ....................: 12,078 5,353,991 658,255 1,537,886 136,915 6,158,013 144,358 6,013,655 : Cattle ranching and farming (1121) .......................: 7,349 4,046,923 624,547 1,948,672 179,472 5,929,623 137,101 5,792,521 Beef cattle ranching and farming, : including feedlots (11211) ............................: 7,015 3,687,948 356,955 1,595,325 114,241 1,796,084 71,313 1,724,771 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ............: 6,883 3,495,391 325,568 1,545,050 107,850 845,740 54,288 791,452 Cattle feedlots (112112) .............................: 132 192,557 31,387 4,216,844 447,496 950,344 17,025 933,319 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...............: 334 358,975 267,592 9,370,034 1,549,525 4,133,539 65,789 4,067,750 : Hog and pig farming (1122) ...............................: 179 6,377 897 692,420 59,819 23,224 449 22,775 : Poultry and egg production (1123) ........................: 601 11,281 1,040 582,037 67,634 39,237 312 38,925 Chicken egg production (11231) .........................: 520 8,983 755 549,145 53,101 17,398 156 17,241 Broilers and other meat-type chicken : production (11232) ....................................: 2 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) - (D) Turkey production (11233) ..............................: - - - - - - - - Poultry hatcheries (11234) .............................: 1 (D) - (D) (D) (D) - (D) Other poultry production (11239) .......................: 78 2,242 (D) 627,522 (D) (D) 155 (D) : Sheep and goat farming (1124) ............................: 1,092 260,590 10,493 725,896 56,272 44,122 2,661 41,461 Sheep farming (11241) ..................................: 606 251,539 9,881 953,611 62,160 40,876 2,575 38,302 Goat farming (11242) ...................................: 486 9,051 612 441,955 48,930 3,245 86 3,159 : Aquaculture (1125) .......................................: 45 3,565 340 2,345,672 189,541 75,157 119 75,037 : Other animal production (1129) ...........................: 2,812 1,025,255 20,938 1,024,827 75,882 46,650 3,715 42,935 Apiculture (11291) .....................................: 119 (D) 595 485,682 113,574 15,297 247 15,050 Horse and other equine production (11292) ..............: 1,935 128,964 9,659 560,618 71,501 10,764 (D) (D) Fur-bearing animal and rabbit : production (11293) ....................................: 13 (D) 504 1,359,440 150,305 4,621 (D) (D) All other animal production (11299) ....................: 745 886,496 10,180 2,310,804 79,942 15,968 2,904 13,064 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 49. Renewable Energy: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2022 : 2017 :: Item : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ..............farms: 1,682 1,232 :: Renewable energy producing systems (see text) - Con. : : :: Geothermal/geoexchange systems ...........................farms: 191 184 Solar panels .............................................farms: 1,427 944 :: : : :: Small hydro systems ......................................farms: 82 70 Wind turbines ............................................farms: 99 138 :: : : :: Wind rights leased to others ...............................farms: 83 85 Methane digesters ........................................farms: 10 4 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 50. Institutional, Research, Experimental, and American Indian Reservation Farms: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms .....................................................number: 93 99 :: Market value of agricultural products sold - Con. : Land in farms ..............................................acres: 890,967 477,127 :: Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...........$1,000: 8,988 3,549 Average size of farm ...................................acres: 9,580 4,819 :: Livestock, poultry, and their products ..................$1,000: 28,140 29,040 : :: : Estimated market value of land and buildings ..............$1,000: 1,235,342 568,250 :: Total farm production expenses 1/ .........................$1,000: 37,876 33,581 Average per farm .....................................dollars: 13,283,249 5,739,901 :: Average per farm .....................................dollars: 407,265 339,199 Average per acre .....................................dollars: 1,387 1,191 :: : : :: Government payments ........................................farms: 8 12 Estimated market value of all machinery and : :: $1,000: 1,652 442 equipment ................................................$1,000: 16,420 12,524 :: Average per farm .....................................dollars: 206,478 36,835 : :: : Land in farms according to use: : :: Total income from farm-related sources .....................farms: 29 22 : :: $1,000: 7,518 3,090 Total cropland ...........................................farms: 35 34 :: Average per farm .....................................dollars: 259,235 140,436 acres: 56,431 (D) :: : Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 33 29 :: Tenure: : acres: (D) (D) :: Full owners ...................................................: 70 84 Other pasture and grazing land that could have : :: Part owners ...................................................: 18 8 been used for crops without additional : :: Tenants .......................................................: 5 7 improvements ..........................................farms: 2 3 :: : acres: (D) (D) :: Farms by North American Industry Classification System: : Other cropland .........................................farms: 14 15 :: : acres: (D) 10,870 :: Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 3 4 : :: Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 8 6 Total woodland ...........................................farms: 8 8 :: Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 1 1 acres: (D) (D) :: Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 3 2 :: production (1114) ............................................: 10 11 acres: (D) (D) :: : Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 5 7 :: Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 7 9 acres: 258 (D) :: Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - : :: Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - Permanent pasture and rangeland other than cropland : :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : and woodland pastured ...................................farms: 39 34 :: crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 7 9 acres: 819,300 393,692 :: : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 9 5 facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 46 58 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: - - acres: (D) (D) :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: - 2 Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 37 31 :: Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: - - acres: 11,538 5,316 :: : : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: - - Market value of agricultural products sold ................$1,000: 37,128 32,589 :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 1 1 Average per farm .....................................dollars: 399,226 329,182 :: Aquaculture and other animal production (1125, 1129) ..........: 54 60 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included within total farm production expenses. Table 51. Organic Agriculture: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2022 : 2017 :: Item : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : :: ALL PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : :: FOR FARMS WITH CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : : :: ORGANIC PRODUCTION 1/ (SEE TEXT) - Con. : Total organic product sales ..........................farms: 227 260 :: : $1,000: 166,224 128,916 :: Place of residence: : Average per farm ...............................dollars: 732,265 495,830 :: On farm operated ........................................: 376 395 : :: Not on farm operated ....................................: 176 178 By value of sales: : :: : $1 to $4,999 .....................................farms: 24 37 :: Days worked off farm: : $1,000: 59 63 :: None ....................................................: 254 298 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................farms: 7 5 :: Any .....................................................: 298 275 $1,000: 52 30 :: 1 to 49 days ..........................................: 98 64 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................farms: 22 29 :: 50 to 99 days .........................................: 45 26 $1,000: 396 482 :: 100 to 199 days .......................................: 40 45 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................farms: 16 26 :: 200 days or more ......................................: 115 140 $1,000: 511 1,033 :: : $50,000 or more ..................................farms: 158 163 :: Years on present farm: : $1,000: 165,206 127,307 :: 2 years or less .........................................: 33 87 : :: 3 or 4 years ............................................: 61 37 TYPE OF PRODUCTION : :: 5 to 9 years ............................................: 137 86 : :: 10 years or more ........................................: 321 363 USDA National Organic Program certified : :: : organic production ..................................farms: 233 261 :: Average years on present farm ...........................: 18.1 19.1 USDA National Organic Program organic : :: : production exempt from certification ................farms: 20 34 :: Age group: : Acres transitioning into USDA National : :: Under 25 years ..........................................: 12 10 Organic Program organic production ..................farms: 35 87 :: 25 to 34 years ..........................................: 82 80 : :: 35 to 44 years ..........................................: 117 89 ALL PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS : :: 45 to 54 years ..........................................: 105 133 FOR FARMS WITH CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : :: 55 to 64 years ..........................................: 107 135 ORGANIC PRODUCTION 1/ : :: 65 to 74 years ..........................................: 88 86 : :: 75 years and over .......................................: 41 40 Sex of producers: : :: : Male ....................................................: 368 378 :: Average age .............................................: 51.3 52.3 Female ..................................................: 184 195 :: : : :: Military service: : Primary occupation: : :: Never served or only on active duty for training : Farming .................................................: 377 379 :: in Reserves or National Guard (see text) ...............: 531 553 Other ...................................................: 175 194 :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...............: 21 20 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 52. Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ...........................................number: 43,333 44,355 :: Age group - Con. : : :: : Sex of producers: : :: 25 to 34 years ..........................................: 3,027 3,269 Male ....................................................: 26,384 27,125 :: 35 to 44 years ..........................................: 6,911 6,241 Female ..................................................: 16,949 17,230 :: 45 to 54 years ..........................................: 7,320 7,947 : :: 55 to 64 years ..........................................: 10,123 12,333 Hired managers ............................................: 3,382 3,253 :: 65 to 74 years ..........................................: 10,095 9,484 : :: 75 years and over .......................................: 5,025 4,468 Primary occupation: : :: : Farming .................................................: 17,793 18,390 :: Average age .............................................: 56.6 56.4 Other ...................................................: 25,540 25,965 :: : : :: Young producers (see text) ................................: 3,859 (NA) Place of residence: : :: : On farm operated ........................................: 33,141 35,823 :: Producers of Hispanic, Latino, : Not on farm operated ....................................: 10,192 8,532 :: or Spanish origin ........................................: 1,341 1,258 : :: : Days of work off farm: : :: Producers by race: : None ....................................................: 16,151 16,755 :: American Indian or Alaska Native ........................: 290 241 Any .....................................................: 27,182 27,600 :: Asian ...................................................: 144 106 1 to 49 days ..........................................: 4,566 4,261 :: Black or African American ...............................: 19 11 50 to 99 days .........................................: 2,032 2,044 :: Native Hawaiian or : 100 to 199 days .......................................: 3,482 3,894 :: Other Pacific Islander..................................: 42 27 200 days or more ......................................: 17,102 17,401 :: White ...................................................: 42,509 43,673 : :: More than one race reported .............................: 329 297 Years on present farm: : :: : 2 years or less .........................................: 2,561 3,565 :: Military service: : 3 or 4 years ............................................: 4,392 4,127 :: Never served or only on active duty for training : 5 to 9 years ............................................: 9,426 6,651 :: in the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ...........: 39,671 39,742 10 years or more ........................................: 26,954 30,012 :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...............: 3,662 4,613 : :: : Average years on present farm .............................: 19.0 19.4 :: Number of persons living : : :: in producers' households .................................: 86,167 88,752 Years operating any farm: : :: : 5 years or less .........................................: 7,099 7,379 :: On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : 6 to 10 years ...........................................: 7,699 5,654 :: Day-to-day decisions ....................................: 37,172 38,434 11 years or more ........................................: 28,535 31,322 :: Land use and/or crop decisions ..........................: 32,598 34,157 : :: Livestock decisions .....................................: 26,379 28,051 Average years on any farm .................................: 21.7 22.0 :: Marketing decisions (see text) ..........................: 25,823 (NA) : :: Record keeping and/or financial management ..............: 30,863 32,900 Age group: : :: Estate planning or succession planning ..................: 23,727 24,508 Under 25 years ..........................................: 832 613 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 53. Selected Farm Characteristics by Producers' Involvement in Decisionmaking: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Day-to-day : Land use and/or : Livestock : decisions : crop decisions : decisions :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................................number: 22,066 24,260 20,043 22,263 15,933 18,080 Land in farms .......................................................acres: 11,263,799 11,524,230 10,495,010 10,966,573 7,726,588 7,910,903 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .............................................................: 5,623 6,456 4,865 5,653 4,472 5,206 10 to 49 acres ...........................................................: 6,760 7,063 6,108 6,478 5,119 5,540 50 to 179 acres ..........................................................: 3,691 4,037 3,420 3,808 2,466 2,939 180 to 499 acres .........................................................: 2,384 2,728 2,212 2,537 1,586 1,841 500 acres or more ........................................................: 3,608 3,976 3,438 3,787 2,290 2,554 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .................................................farms: 20,815 22,716 18,931 20,846 15,120 17,132 acres: 7,536,672 7,757,059 6,962,463 7,351,891 5,445,107 5,694,288 Rented or leased land in farms ......................................farms: 5,640 6,552 5,287 6,216 3,920 4,614 acres: 3,727,127 3,767,171 3,532,547 3,614,682 2,281,481 2,216,615 : TENURE : : Full owners .........................................................farms: 16,426 17,708 14,756 16,047 12,013 13,466 acres: 4,578,217 4,966,279 4,094,110 4,636,868 3,301,696 3,759,965 Part owners .........................................................farms: 4,389 5,008 4,175 4,799 3,107 3,666 acres: 5,759,877 5,479,217 5,578,440 5,300,716 3,896,789 3,673,165 Tenants .............................................................farms: 1,251 1,544 1,112 1,417 813 948 acres: 925,705 1,078,734 822,460 1,028,989 528,103 477,773 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ...............................................................farms: 22,066 24,260 20,043 22,263 15,933 18,080 $1,000: 10,932,094 7,659,627 10,314,054 6,866,796 7,758,453 5,286,830 : Market value of agricultural products sold ........................farms: 22,066 24,260 20,043 22,263 15,933 18,080 $1,000: 10,802,591 7,532,368 10,190,958 6,745,625 7,680,358 5,221,292 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...................farms: 10,212 12,055 9,637 11,611 5,717 7,306 $1,000: 4,684,241 3,192,713 4,540,607 3,064,852 1,734,873 1,088,650 Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........................farms: 10,482 12,053 9,440 11,052 9,906 11,524 $1,000: 6,118,350 4,339,655 5,650,352 3,680,773 5,945,485 4,132,642 Government payments ...............................................farms: 4,057 5,925 3,800 5,575 2,470 3,452 $1,000: 129,502 127,259 123,096 121,171 78,095 65,538 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 .........................................................: 5,022 6,117 4,543 5,371 3,981 4,862 $1,000 to $2,499 .........................................................: 2,751 2,820 2,407 2,548 2,041 2,168 $2,500 to $4,999 .........................................................: 2,256 2,539 2,025 2,346 1,686 2,032 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................................................: 2,447 2,491 2,156 2,283 1,831 1,956 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................................................: 2,315 2,529 2,072 2,341 1,704 1,932 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................................................: 1,493 1,614 1,373 1,524 1,117 1,192 $50,000 or more ..........................................................: 5,782 6,150 5,467 5,850 3,573 3,938 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans ...........................................................farms: 39 138 38 137 21 57 $1,000: 5,255 9,072 4,774 9,048 1,401 3,432 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Program payments .......................................farms: 1,503 1,682 1,389 1,510 610 790 $1,000: 18,603 27,688 17,065 25,169 9,208 12,843 Other Federal farm program payments .................................farms: 2,950 5,369 2,799 5,087 2,079 3,221 $1,000: 110,900 99,571 106,031 96,002 68,886 52,695 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .........................................: 1,637 1,996 1,557 1,944 675 900 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .......................................: 751 827 714 785 295 307 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ........................................: 395 372 365 359 186 158 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ..................: 551 434 497 398 160 127 Other crop farming (1119) ................................................: 6,963 7,093 6,531 6,682 3,577 3,773 Tobacco farming (11191) ................................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .................................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..............................: 6,963 7,093 6,531 6,682 3,577 3,773 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ................................: 6,691 7,908 5,969 7,198 6,393 7,636 Cattle feedlots (112112) .................................................: 125 143 118 127 119 130 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .................................: 331 500 296 439 327 490 Hog and pig farming (1122) ...............................................: 179 215 145 185 164 206 Poultry and egg production (1123) ........................................: 592 291 495 252 551 241 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ............................................: 1,071 1,174 920 1,014 1,044 1,147 Aquaculture and other : animal production (1125, 1129) ..........................................: 2,780 3,307 2,436 2,880 2,442 2,965 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization: : Operation more than 50 percent owned : by one producer's household and/or : extended family .....................................................: 20,830 23,228 18,939 21,332 15,241 17,521 Limited Liability Company ............................................: 3,280 2,592 3,062 2,423 2,294 1,855 : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual .................................................: 17,811 20,039 16,108 18,329 13,325 15,445 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 53. Selected Farm Characteristics by Producers' Involvement in Decisionmaking: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Marketing : Record keeping and : Estate or succession : decisions (see text) : financial management : planning :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................................number: 16,161 (NA) 20,106 22,659 14,358 15,949 Land in farms .......................................................acres: 9,228,145 (NA) 10,860,149 10,994,234 8,632,362 8,707,386 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .............................................................: 3,752 (NA) 4,900 5,881 3,126 3,712 10 to 49 acres ...........................................................: 4,759 (NA) 6,057 6,491 4,224 4,514 50 to 179 acres ..........................................................: 2,684 (NA) 3,395 3,855 2,566 2,820 180 to 499 acres .........................................................: 1,902 (NA) 2,277 2,614 1,730 1,945 500 acres or more ........................................................: 3,064 (NA) 3,477 3,818 2,712 2,958 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .................................................farms: 15,130 (NA) 18,927 21,200 13,648 15,092 acres: 5,922,852 (NA) 7,214,327 7,362,990 5,829,228 5,891,777 Rented or leased land in farms ......................................farms: 4,916 (NA) 5,379 6,278 3,794 4,403 acres: 3,305,293 (NA) 3,645,822 3,631,244 2,803,134 2,815,609 : TENURE : : Full owners .........................................................farms: 11,245 (NA) 14,727 16,381 10,564 11,546 acres: 3,382,807 (NA) 4,370,236 4,692,195 3,450,200 3,700,646 Part owners .........................................................farms: 3,885 (NA) 4,200 4,819 3,084 3,546 acres: 5,040,860 (NA) 5,557,882 5,289,806 4,543,084 4,183,364 Tenants .............................................................farms: 1,031 (NA) 1,179 1,459 710 857 acres: 804,478 (NA) 932,031 1,012,233 639,078 823,376 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ...............................................................farms: 16,161 (NA) 20,106 22,659 14,358 15,949 $1,000: 9,281,948 (NA) 10,594,577 7,234,110 8,694,776 6,065,247 : Market value of agricultural products sold ........................farms: 16,161 (NA) 20,106 22,659 14,358 15,949 $1,000: 9,171,211 (NA) 10,469,364 7,113,530 8,592,687 5,968,402 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...................farms: 8,032 (NA) 9,370 11,339 6,686 7,961 $1,000: 4,106,544 (NA) 4,485,318 2,934,054 3,675,741 2,341,405 Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........................farms: 8,543 (NA) 9,801 11,600 6,935 8,318 $1,000: 5,064,667 (NA) 5,984,046 4,179,476 4,916,946 3,626,997 Government payments ...............................................farms: 3,082 (NA) 3,906 5,658 2,995 4,299 $1,000: 110,737 (NA) 125,213 120,579 102,089 96,845 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 .........................................................: 2,983 (NA) 4,326 5,359 3,239 3,763 $1,000 to $2,499 .........................................................: 1,808 (NA) 2,457 2,630 1,624 1,633 $2,500 to $4,999 .........................................................: 1,514 (NA) 1,983 2,383 1,363 1,644 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................................................: 1,788 (NA) 2,265 2,382 1,471 1,648 $10,000 to $24,999 .......................................................: 1,750 (NA) 2,122 2,416 1,463 1,667 $25,000 to $49,999 .......................................................: 1,208 (NA) 1,404 1,583 992 1,160 $50,000 or more ..........................................................: 5,110 (NA) 5,549 5,906 4,206 4,434 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans ...........................................................farms: 37 (NA) 36 136 28 107 $1,000: 4,763 (NA) 4,750 9,045 2,726 7,349 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Program payments .......................................farms: 846 (NA) 1,448 1,578 1,130 1,206 $1,000: 11,519 (NA) 17,964 26,049 14,507 19,851 Other Federal farm program payments .................................farms: 2,579 (NA) 2,856 5,140 2,176 3,904 $1,000: 99,218 (NA) 107,249 94,530 87,582 76,994 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .........................................: 1,415 (NA) 1,556 1,927 1,108 1,322 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .......................................: 620 (NA) 699 758 513 492 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ........................................: 282 (NA) 347 335 243 223 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ..................: 450 (NA) 505 404 302 232 Other crop farming (1119) ................................................: 4,675 (NA) 6,308 6,528 4,617 4,581 Tobacco farming (11191) ................................................: - (NA) - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .................................................: - (NA) - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..............................: 4,675 (NA) 6,308 6,528 4,617 4,581 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ................................: 5,082 (NA) 6,107 7,484 4,340 5,425 Cattle feedlots (112112) .................................................: 114 (NA) 120 136 99 114 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .................................: 288 (NA) 321 468 258 401 Hog and pig farming (1122) ...............................................: 138 (NA) 162 210 88 121 Poultry and egg production (1123) ........................................: 411 (NA) 544 260 339 184 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ............................................: 850 (NA) 999 1,124 662 685 Aquaculture and other : animal production (1125, 1129) ..........................................: 1,836 (NA) 2,438 3,025 1,789 2,169 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization: : Operation more than 50 percent owned : by one producer's household and/or : extended family .....................................................: 15,252 (NA) 18,991 21,685 13,548 15,320 Limited Liability Company ............................................: 2,666 (NA) 3,151 2,498 2,354 1,876 : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual .................................................: 12,783 (NA) 16,046 18,604 11,188 12,955 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 53. Selected Farm Characteristics by Producers' Involvement in Decisionmaking: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Day-to-day : Land use and/or : Livestock : decisions : crop decisions : decisions :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by- - Con. : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: - Con. : : Partnership ..........................................................: 1,682 1,815 1,537 1,706 1,060 1,229 Corporation ..........................................................: 2,092 1,840 1,968 1,722 1,258 1,064 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ...................................: 481 566 430 506 290 342 : Number of producers: : 1 producer ...........................................................: 6,632 8,699 5,891 7,910 4,444 6,226 2 producers ..........................................................: 12,462 13,146 11,394 12,053 9,405 10,209 3 producers ..........................................................: 1,573 1,451 1,473 1,399 1,125 988 4 producers ..........................................................: 884 679 806 629 657 474 5 or more producers ..................................................: 515 285 479 272 302 183 : Number of male producers: : 1 producer .........................................................: 17,096 19,511 15,492 17,862 12,617 14,863 2 producers ........................................................: 2,417 2,251 2,264 2,149 1,647 1,437 3 producers ........................................................: 816 529 754 509 530 327 4 producers ........................................................: 187 181 166 164 94 112 5 or more producers ................................................: 159 72 152 70 60 37 : Number of female producers: : 1 producer .........................................................: 13,879 14,651 12,667 13,423 10,542 11,496 2 producers ........................................................: 1,058 911 954 834 827 675 3 producers ........................................................: 159 111 146 104 115 71 4 producers ........................................................: 79 34 72 28 56 20 5 or more producers ................................................: 42 23 42 20 17 14 : Farms reporting- : Internet access ........................................................: 18,888 20,482 17,246 18,898 13,719 15,431 Dial-up ..............................................................: 515 591 492 540 393 448 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .......................: 9,775 (NA) 8,995 (NA) 7,029 (NA) Cellular data plan (see text) ........................................: 12,142 7,375 11,150 6,953 8,941 5,590 Satellite ............................................................: 5,370 5,272 4,871 4,845 4,063 4,108 Don't know ...........................................................: 841 1,851 737 1,711 534 1,389 Other ................................................................: 295 1,022 273 922 222 744 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ............................................................: 18,234 20,280 16,553 18,558 13,397 15,382 2 households ...........................................................: 2,756 2,888 2,536 2,690 1,882 1,979 3 households ...........................................................: 645 620 566 589 384 421 4 households ...........................................................: 260 282 233 256 167 202 5 or more households ...................................................: 171 190 155 170 103 96 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 53. Selected Farm Characteristics by Producers' Involvement in Decisionmaking: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Marketing : Record keeping and : Estate or succession : decisions (see text) : financial management : planning :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by- - Con. : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: - Con. : : Partnership ..........................................................: 1,331 (NA) 1,623 1,742 1,244 1,309 Corporation ..........................................................: 1,750 (NA) 2,017 1,788 1,520 1,293 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ...................................: 297 (NA) 420 525 406 392 : Number of producers: : 1 producer ...........................................................: 4,752 (NA) 5,773 7,910 4,108 5,695 2 producers ..........................................................: 9,107 (NA) 11,496 12,394 8,095 8,530 3 producers ..........................................................: 1,233 (NA) 1,507 1,415 1,143 1,030 4 producers ..........................................................: 672 (NA) 833 654 649 469 5 or more producers ..................................................: 397 (NA) 497 286 363 225 : Number of male producers: : 1 producer .........................................................: 12,495 (NA) 15,488 18,189 10,904 12,700 2 producers ........................................................: 1,865 (NA) 2,271 2,156 1,746 1,558 3 producers ........................................................: 646 (NA) 771 511 587 389 4 producers ........................................................: 150 (NA) 179 178 151 131 5 or more producers ................................................: 121 (NA) 151 72 91 58 : Number of female producers: : 1 producer .........................................................: 10,089 (NA) 12,839 13,786 9,120 9,570 2 producers ........................................................: 789 (NA) 995 885 739 613 3 producers ........................................................: 121 (NA) 146 109 108 86 4 producers ........................................................: 52 (NA) 75 34 59 22 5 or more producers ................................................: 28 (NA) 51 23 27 21 : Farms reporting- : Internet access ........................................................: 14,121 (NA) 17,356 19,308 12,348 13,535 Dial-up ..............................................................: 404 (NA) 483 531 360 413 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .......................: 7,375 (NA) 9,117 (NA) 6,403 (NA) Cellular data plan (see text) ........................................: 9,334 (NA) 11,263 7,078 8,037 5,054 Satellite ............................................................: 4,042 (NA) 4,890 4,945 3,552 3,542 Don't know ...........................................................: 586 (NA) 736 1,751 496 1,212 Other ................................................................: 223 (NA) 270 960 205 683 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ............................................................: 13,254 (NA) 16,544 18,906 11,769 13,218 2 households ...........................................................: 2,135 (NA) 2,564 2,703 1,830 1,922 3 households ...........................................................: 475 (NA) 593 604 423 451 4 households ...........................................................: 184 (NA) 238 271 207 226 5 or more households ...................................................: 113 (NA) 167 175 129 132 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 54. Involvement in Decisionmaking by Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Day-to-day : Land use and/or : Livestock : decisions : crop decisions : decisions :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ..........................................................number: 37,172 38,434 32,598 34,157 26,379 28,051 : Sex of producers: : Male ...................................................................: 23,664 24,867 21,779 23,262 16,542 17,864 Female .................................................................: 13,508 13,567 10,819 10,895 9,837 10,187 : Hired managers ...........................................................: 2,977 2,896 2,708 2,674 1,453 1,496 : Primary occupation: : Farming ................................................................: 16,395 16,990 14,727 15,397 10,936 11,780 Other ..................................................................: 20,777 21,444 17,871 18,760 15,443 16,271 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .......................................................: 29,580 31,941 25,856 28,074 22,073 24,383 Not on farm operated ...................................................: 7,592 6,493 6,742 6,083 4,306 3,668 : Days of work off farm: : None ...................................................................: 14,091 14,708 12,192 12,822 8,954 9,801 Any ....................................................................: 23,081 23,726 20,406 21,335 17,425 18,250 1 to 49 days .........................................................: 3,771 3,635 3,207 3,256 2,582 2,518 50 to 99 days ........................................................: 1,760 1,818 1,571 1,609 1,218 1,359 100 to 199 days ......................................................: 3,090 3,460 2,771 3,112 2,378 2,653 200 days or more .....................................................: 14,460 14,813 12,857 13,358 11,247 11,720 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ........................................................: 2,031 2,981 1,765 2,651 1,428 2,305 3 or 4 years ...........................................................: 3,620 3,525 3,133 3,200 2,734 2,753 5 to 9 years ...........................................................: 8,126 5,717 7,116 5,106 6,046 4,214 10 years or more .......................................................: 23,395 26,211 20,584 23,200 16,171 18,779 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ........................................................: 5,791 6,253 4,971 5,607 4,242 4,841 6 to 10 years ..........................................................: 6,616 4,817 5,691 4,247 4,908 3,574 11 years or more .......................................................: 24,765 27,364 21,936 24,303 17,229 19,636 : Age group: : Under 25 years .........................................................: 560 467 445 354 440 397 25 to 34 years .........................................................: 2,570 2,791 2,298 2,501 1,945 2,013 35 to 44 years .........................................................: 6,016 5,433 5,306 4,981 4,562 4,239 45 to 54 years .........................................................: 6,340 6,939 5,459 6,077 4,699 5,256 55 to 64 years .........................................................: 8,682 10,739 7,701 9,655 6,235 7,863 65 to 74 years .........................................................: 8,786 8,334 7,707 7,380 5,857 5,775 75 years and over ......................................................: 4,218 3,731 3,682 3,209 2,641 2,508 : Average age ............................................................: 56.7 56.5 56.8 56.4 55.8 55.9 : Young producers (see text) ...............................................: 3,130 (NA) 2,743 (NA) 2,385 (NA) : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .........................: 1,165 1,067 905 922 860 792 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .......................................: 249 214 230 186 201 178 Asian ..................................................................: 115 94 80 88 64 43 Black or African American ..............................................: 16 9 12 6 10 1 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ..............................: 38 26 27 24 31 19 White ..................................................................: 36,471 37,837 31,998 33,613 25,865 27,619 More than one race reported ............................................: 283 254 251 240 208 191 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..........................: 33,928 34,258 29,711 30,286 24,048 24,879 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ..............................: 3,244 4,176 2,887 3,871 2,331 3,172 : Number of persons living in producers' households ........................: 77,038 80,765 69,919 74,324 54,271 58,865 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 54. Involvement in Decisionmaking by Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Marketing : Record keeping and : Estate or succession : decisions (see text) : financial management : planning :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ..........................................................number: 25,823 (NA) 30,863 32,900 23,727 24,508 : Sex of producers: : Male ...................................................................: 16,753 (NA) 18,371 20,028 14,379 15,289 Female .................................................................: 9,070 (NA) 12,492 12,872 9,348 9,219 : Hired managers ...........................................................: 2,324 (NA) 2,443 2,386 1,843 1,776 : Primary occupation: : Farming ................................................................: 12,636 (NA) 13,702 14,542 10,578 11,063 Other ..................................................................: 13,187 (NA) 17,161 18,358 13,149 13,445 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .......................................................: 20,869 (NA) 24,486 27,328 18,969 20,517 Not on farm operated ...................................................: 4,954 (NA) 6,377 5,572 4,758 3,991 : Days of work off farm: : None ...................................................................: 10,086 (NA) 11,833 12,491 9,422 9,749 Any ....................................................................: 15,737 (NA) 19,030 20,409 14,305 14,759 1 to 49 days .........................................................: 2,533 (NA) 3,173 3,132 2,408 2,316 50 to 99 days ........................................................: 1,247 (NA) 1,429 1,494 1,102 1,103 100 to 199 days ......................................................: 2,278 (NA) 2,639 2,914 2,011 2,098 200 days or more .....................................................: 9,679 (NA) 11,789 12,869 8,784 9,242 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ........................................................: 1,287 (NA) 1,541 2,455 1,071 1,569 3 or 4 years ...........................................................: 2,355 (NA) 2,906 2,933 2,086 1,936 5 to 9 years ...........................................................: 5,410 (NA) 6,670 4,773 4,707 3,332 10 years or more .......................................................: 16,771 (NA) 19,746 22,739 15,863 17,671 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ........................................................: 3,667 (NA) 4,553 5,120 3,084 3,279 6 to 10 years ..........................................................: 4,197 (NA) 5,327 4,052 3,745 2,752 11 years or more .......................................................: 17,959 (NA) 20,983 23,728 16,898 18,477 : Age group: : Under 25 years .........................................................: 345 (NA) 265 274 139 146 25 to 34 years .........................................................: 1,897 (NA) 2,071 2,317 1,300 1,360 35 to 44 years .........................................................: 4,196 (NA) 5,017 4,683 3,429 3,088 45 to 54 years .........................................................: 4,348 (NA) 5,376 5,880 3,834 4,150 55 to 64 years .........................................................: 6,062 (NA) 7,237 9,385 5,803 7,095 65 to 74 years .........................................................: 6,145 (NA) 7,368 7,152 6,061 5,796 75 years and over ......................................................: 2,830 (NA) 3,529 3,209 3,161 2,873 : Average age ............................................................: 56.6 (NA) 57.1 56.7 58.6 58.3 : Young producers (see text) ...............................................: 2,242 (NA) 2,336 (NA) 1,439 (NA) : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .........................: 713 (NA) 828 896 603 649 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .......................................: 162 (NA) 191 187 164 144 Asian ..................................................................: 69 (NA) 90 85 77 63 Black or African American ..............................................: 11 (NA) 10 4 6 2 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ..............................: 29 (NA) 25 20 30 13 White ..................................................................: 25,366 (NA) 30,304 32,392 23,279 24,118 More than one race reported ............................................: 186 (NA) 243 212 171 168 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..........................: 23,717 (NA) 28,357 29,453 21,605 21,696 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ..............................: 2,106 (NA) 2,506 3,447 2,122 2,812 : Number of persons living in producers' households ........................: 55,236 (NA) 63,043 67,474 47,288 49,492 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 55. Selected Farm Characteristics - Farms with Male Producers: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms ................................................number: 21,373 23,150 :: : Land in farms .........................................acres: 11,260,574 11,385,009 :: Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : : :: production (1114) .........................................: 491 377 FARMS BY SIZE : :: Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 6,896 6,922 : :: Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 5,308 5,989 :: Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: - - 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 6,437 6,684 :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : 50 to 179 acres ............................................: 3,624 3,876 :: other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ................: 6,896 6,922 180 to 499 acres ...........................................: 2,415 2,697 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 6,489 7,656 500 acres or more ..........................................: 3,589 3,904 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 129 142 : :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 327 491 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 169 206 : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 567 265 Owned land in farms ...................................farms: 20,161 21,637 :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 933 1,027 acres: 7,526,420 7,652,813 :: Aquaculture and other animal production : Rented or leased land in farms ........................farms: 5,554 6,412 :: (1125, 1129) ..............................................: 2,630 2,940 acres: 3,734,154 3,732,196 :: : : :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : TENURE : :: : : :: Farms by- : Full owners ...........................................farms: 15,819 16,738 :: : acres: 4,585,251 4,888,376 :: Type of organization: : Part owners ...........................................farms: 4,342 4,899 :: Operation more than 50 percent owned : acres: 5,708,832 5,416,320 :: by one producer's household and/or : Tenants ...............................................farms: 1,212 1,513 :: extended family .......................................: 20,135 22,142 acres: 966,491 1,080,313 :: Limited Liability Company ..............................: 3,230 2,537 : :: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Operation's legal status for tax : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: purposes: : : :: Family or individual ...................................: 17,092 19,004 Total .................................................farms: 21,373 23,150 :: Partnership ............................................: 1,691 1,812 $1,000: 10,950,025 7,631,327 :: Corporation ............................................: 2,083 1,812 : :: Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : Market value of agricultural products sold ..........farms: 21,373 23,150 :: association, American Indian Reservation, etc. ........: 507 522 $1,000: 10,820,764 7,505,765 :: : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops .....farms: 9,979 11,803 :: Number of producers: : $1,000: 4,711,741 3,169,760 :: 1 producer .............................................: 5,637 7,414 Livestock, poultry, and their : :: 2 producers ............................................: 12,677 13,294 products .........................................farms: 10,064 11,557 :: 3 producers ............................................: 1,609 1,471 $1,000: 6,109,023 4,336,005 :: 4 producers ............................................: 905 683 Government payments .................................farms: 4,033 5,805 :: 5 or more producers ....................................: 545 288 $1,000: 129,261 125,562 :: : : :: Number of male producers: : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 1 producer ...........................................: 17,638 20,067 : :: 2 producers ..........................................: 2,533 2,286 Less than $1,000 ...........................................: 4,824 5,594 :: 3 producers ..........................................: 838 542 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................................: 2,639 2,704 :: 4 producers ..........................................: 191 180 $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................................: 2,167 2,410 :: 5 or more producers ..................................: 173 75 $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................................: 2,319 2,353 :: : $10,000 to $24,999 .........................................: 2,210 2,433 :: Number of female producers: : $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 1,458 1,576 :: 1 producer ...........................................: 12,989 (NA) $50,000 or more ............................................: 5,756 6,080 :: 2 producers ..........................................: 942 (NA) : :: 3 producers ..........................................: 151 (NA) COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: 4 producers ..........................................: 77 (NA) AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: 5 or more producers ..................................: 56 (NA) : :: : CCC loans .............................................farms: 39 138 :: Farms reporting- : $1,000: 5,255 9,072 :: Internet access ..........................................: 18,247 19,564 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : :: Dial-up ................................................: 505 561 Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : :: Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .........: 9,475 (NA) Enhancement Program payments .........................farms: 1,510 1,625 :: Cellular data plan (see text) ..........................: 11,718 7,077 $1,000: 18,686 26,329 :: Satellite ..............................................: 5,152 4,984 Other Federal farm program payments ...................farms: 2,928 5,286 :: Don't know .............................................: 801 1,776 $1,000: 110,575 99,233 :: Other ..................................................: 292 987 : :: : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: Farms by number of households sharing : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: in net income of operation: : : :: 1 household ..............................................: 17,459 19,216 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 1,637 2,008 :: 2 households .............................................: 2,782 2,832 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 732 785 :: 3 households .............................................: 651 623 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 373 331 :: 4 households .............................................: 281 279 : :: 5 or more households .....................................: 200 200 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 56. Male Producers - Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ............................................number: 26,384 27,125 :: Age group - Con. : : :: : Hired managers .............................................: 2,628 2,618 :: 55 to 64 years ...........................................: 6,001 7,457 : :: 65 to 74 years ...........................................: 6,236 6,050 Primary occupation: : :: 75 years and over ........................................: 3,345 3,003 Farming ..................................................: 12,298 12,872 :: : Other ....................................................: 14,086 14,253 :: Average age ..............................................: 57.0 57.1 : :: : Place of residence: : :: Young producers (see text) .................................: 2,323 (NA) On farm operated .........................................: 19,381 21,210 :: : Not on farm operated .....................................: 7,003 5,915 :: Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ...........: 861 813 : :: : Days of work off farm: : :: Producers by race: : None .....................................................: 9,761 10,254 :: American Indian or Alaska Native .........................: 179 138 Any ......................................................: 16,623 16,871 :: Asian ....................................................: 68 66 1 to 49 days ...........................................: 2,678 2,604 :: Black or African American ................................: 10 5 50 to 99 days ..........................................: 1,185 1,176 :: Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ................: 23 25 100 to 199 days ........................................: 2,006 2,302 :: White ....................................................: 25,873 26,708 200 days or more .......................................: 10,754 10,789 :: More than one race reported ..............................: 231 183 : :: : Years on present farm: : :: Military service: : 2 years or less ..........................................: 1,550 1,930 :: Never served or only on active duty for training in the : 3 or 4 years .............................................: 2,514 2,423 :: Reserves or National Guard (see text) ...................: 23,007 22,810 5 to 9 years .............................................: 5,434 3,909 :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ................: 3,377 4,315 10 years or more .........................................: 16,886 18,863 :: : : :: Number of persons living in producers' : Years operating any farm: : :: households ................................................: 71,246 73,533 5 years or less ..........................................: 4,055 4,004 :: : 6 to 10 years ............................................: 4,319 3,327 :: On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : 11 years or more .........................................: 18,010 19,794 :: Day-to-day decisions .....................................: 23,664 24,867 : :: Land use and/or crop decisions ...........................: 21,779 23,262 Age group: : :: Livestock decisions ......................................: 16,542 17,864 Under 25 years ...........................................: 535 326 :: Marketing decisions (see text) ...........................: 16,753 (NA) 25 to 34 years ...........................................: 1,788 1,916 :: Record keeping and/or financial management ...............: 18,371 20,028 35 to 44 years ...........................................: 4,105 3,783 :: Estate planning or succession planning ...................: 14,379 15,289 45 to 54 years ...........................................: 4,374 4,590 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 57. Selected Farm Characteristics - Farms with Female Producers: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms ................................................number: 15,634 16,134 :: : Land in farms .........................................acres: 6,186,588 5,665,398 :: Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : : :: production (1114) .........................................: 417 332 FARMS BY SIZE : :: Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 4,663 4,216 : :: Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 4,410 5,073 :: Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: - - 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 5,159 5,045 :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : 50 to 179 acres ............................................: 2,559 2,574 :: other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ................: 4,663 4,216 180 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1,491 1,425 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 4,907 5,517 500 acres or more ..........................................: 2,015 2,017 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ...................................: 63 63 : :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 194 267 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 160 177 : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 510 222 Owned land in farms ...................................farms: 14,962 15,368 :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 926 1,014 acres: 4,112,322 3,937,677 :: Aquaculture and other animal : Rented or leased land in farms ........................farms: 3,413 3,594 :: production (1125, 1129) ...................................: 2,172 2,576 acres: 2,074,266 1,727,721 :: : : :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : TENURE : :: : : :: Farms by- : Full owners ...........................................farms: 12,221 12,540 :: : acres: 2,510,317 2,573,663 :: Type of organization: : Part owners ...........................................farms: 2,741 2,828 :: Operation more than 50 percent owned : acres: 3,169,689 2,638,085 :: by one producer's household and/or : Tenants ...............................................farms: 672 766 :: extended family .......................................: 14,958 15,630 acres: 506,582 453,650 :: Limited Liability Company ..............................: 2,329 1,612 : :: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: Family or individual ...................................: 12,937 13,687 : :: Partnership ............................................: 1,068 989 Total .................................................farms: 15,634 16,134 :: Corporation ............................................: 1,315 1,100 $1,000: 4,646,629 2,954,182 :: Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : : :: association, American Indian Reservation, etc. ........: 314 358 Market value of agricultural products sold ..........farms: 15,634 16,134 :: : $1,000: 4,573,393 2,892,291 :: Number of producers: : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops .....farms: 6,569 7,125 :: 1 producer .............................................: 1,321 1,663 $1,000: 2,207,873 1,205,071 :: 2 producers ............................................: 11,826 12,477 Livestock, poultry, and their : :: 3 producers ............................................: 1,254 1,183 products .........................................farms: 7,834 8,558 :: 4 producers ............................................: 827 596 $1,000: 2,365,520 1,687,221 :: 5 or more producers ....................................: 406 215 Government payments .................................farms: 2,611 3,208 :: : $1,000: 73,236 61,891 :: Number of female producers: : : :: 1 producer ...........................................: 14,273 15,045 FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 2 producers ..........................................: 1,087 925 : :: 3 producers ..........................................: 153 117 Less than $1,000 ...........................................: 3,854 4,641 :: 4 producers ..........................................: 71 25 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................................: 2,132 2,137 :: 5 or more producers ..................................: 50 22 $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................................: 1,784 1,854 :: : $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................................: 1,860 1,786 :: Number of male producers: : $10,000 to $24,999 .........................................: 1,698 1,669 :: 1 producer ...........................................: 12,002 (NA) $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 1,037 988 :: 2 producers ..........................................: 1,519 (NA) $50,000 or more ............................................: 3,269 3,059 :: 3 producers ..........................................: 471 (NA) : :: 4 producers ..........................................: 74 (NA) COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: 5 or more producers ..................................: 67 (NA) AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: : : :: Farms reporting- : CCC loans .............................................farms: 20 63 :: Internet access ..........................................: 13,563 14,010 $1,000: 2,770 5,083 :: Dial-up ................................................: 344 403 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : :: Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .........: 7,129 (NA) Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : :: Cellular data plan (see text) ..........................: 8,790 5,130 Enhancement Program payments .........................farms: 1,029 990 :: Satellite ..............................................: 3,913 3,697 $1,000: 12,196 16,270 :: Don't know .............................................: 527 1,227 Other Federal farm program payments ...................farms: 1,827 2,860 :: Other ..................................................: 219 682 $1,000: 61,040 45,621 :: : : :: Farms by number of households sharing : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: in net income of operation: : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: 1 household ..............................................: 13,072 13,721 : :: 2 households .............................................: 1,922 1,857 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 847 957 :: 3 households .............................................: 364 331 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 459 483 :: 4 households .............................................: 165 138 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 316 310 :: 5 or more households .....................................: 111 87 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 58. Female Producers - Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ............................................number: 16,949 17,230 :: Age group - Con. : : :: : Hired managers .............................................: 754 635 :: 55 to 64 years ...........................................: 4,122 4,876 : :: 65 to 74 years ...........................................: 3,859 3,434 Primary occupation: : :: 75 years and over ........................................: 1,680 1,465 Farming ..................................................: 5,495 5,518 :: : Other ....................................................: 11,454 11,712 :: Average age ..............................................: 56.1 55.5 : :: : Place of residence: : :: Young producers (see text) .................................: 1,536 (NA) On farm operated .........................................: 13,760 14,613 :: : Not on farm operated .....................................: 3,189 2,617 :: Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish : : :: origin ....................................................: 480 445 Days of work off farm: : :: : None .....................................................: 6,390 6,501 :: Producers by race: : Any ......................................................: 10,559 10,729 :: American Indian or Alaska Native .........................: 111 103 1 to 49 days ...........................................: 1,888 1,657 :: Asian ....................................................: 76 40 50 to 99 days ..........................................: 847 868 :: Black or African American ................................: 9 6 100 to 199 days ........................................: 1,476 1,592 :: Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ................: 19 2 200 days or more .......................................: 6,348 6,612 :: White ....................................................: 16,636 16,965 : :: More than one race reported ..............................: 98 114 Years on present farm: : :: : 2 years or less ..........................................: 1,011 1,635 :: Military service: : 3 or 4 years .............................................: 1,878 1,704 :: Never served or only on active duty for training in the : 5 to 9 years .............................................: 3,992 2,742 :: Reserves or National Guard (see text) ...................: 16,664 16,932 10 years or more .........................................: 10,068 11,149 :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ................: 285 298 : :: : Years operating any farm: : :: Number of persons living in producers' : 5 years or less ..........................................: 3,044 3,375 :: households ................................................: 14,921 15,219 6 to 10 years ............................................: 3,380 2,327 :: : 11 years or more .........................................: 10,525 11,528 :: On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : : :: Day-to-day decisions .....................................: 13,508 13,567 Age group: : :: Land use and/or crop decisions ...........................: 10,819 10,895 Under 25 years ...........................................: 297 287 :: Livestock decisions ......................................: 9,837 10,187 25 to 34 years ...........................................: 1,239 1,353 :: Marketing decisions (see text) ...........................: 9,070 (NA) 35 to 44 years ...........................................: 2,806 2,458 :: Record keeping and/or financial management ...............: 12,492 12,872 45 to 54 years ...........................................: 2,946 3,357 :: Estate planning or succession planning ...................: 9,348 9,219 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 59. Selected Farm Characteristics - Farms with Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish Origin Producers: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms ................................................number: 1,091 1,039 :: : Land in farms .........................................acres: 534,607 534,884 :: Other crop farming (1119) ..................................: 277 267 : :: Tobacco farming (11191) ..................................: - - FARMS BY SIZE : :: Cotton farming (11192) ...................................: - - : :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : 1 to 9 acres ...............................................: 368 353 :: other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ................: 277 267 10 to 49 acres .............................................: 344 339 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ..................: 413 371 50 to 179 acres ............................................: 145 131 :: Cattle feedlots (112112)....................................: 6 10 180 to 499 acres ...........................................: 96 81 :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ...................: 41 38 500 acres or more ..........................................: 138 135 :: Hog and pig farming (1122) .................................: 6 8 : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) ..........................: 41 23 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..............................: 65 80 : :: Aquaculture and other animal production : Owned land in farms ...................................farms: 1,031 979 :: (1125, 1129) ..............................................: 116 106 acres: 409,143 404,014 :: : Rented or leased land in farms ........................farms: 246 265 :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : acres: 125,464 130,870 :: : : :: Farms by- : TENURE : :: : : :: Type of organization: : Full owners ...........................................farms: 845 774 :: Operation more than 50 percent owned : acres: 127,771 199,401 :: by one producer's household and/or : Part owners ...........................................farms: 186 205 :: extended family .......................................: 1,033 981 acres: 379,639 296,777 :: Limited Liability Company ..............................: 155 122 Tenants ...............................................farms: 60 60 :: : acres: 27,197 38,706 :: Operation's legal status for tax : : :: purposes: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Family or individual ...................................: 870 837 SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: Partnership ............................................: 88 94 : :: Corporation ...........................................: 122 82 Total .................................................farms: 1,091 1,039 :: Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : $1,000: 798,514 660,154 :: association, American Indian Reservation, etc. ........: 11 26 : :: : Market value of agricultural products sold ..........farms: 1,091 1,039 :: Number of producers: : $1,000: 793,072 657,051 :: 1 producer .............................................: 264 280 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops .....farms: 434 488 :: 2 producers ............................................: 624 593 $1,000: 230,800 183,735 :: 3 producers ............................................: 79 81 Livestock, poultry, and their : :: 4 producers ............................................: 81 68 products .........................................farms: 590 560 :: 5 or more producers ....................................: 43 17 $1,000: 562,272 473,316 :: : Government payments .................................farms: 123 188 :: Number of male producers: : $1,000: 5,443 3,104 :: 1 producer ...........................................: 835 813 : :: 2 producers ..........................................: 119 126 FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 3 producers ..........................................: 61 33 : :: 4 producers ..........................................: 35 19 Less than $1,000 ...........................................: 235 242 :: 5 or more producers ..................................: 8 5 $1,000 to $2,499 ...........................................: 133 142 :: : $2,500 to $4,999 ...........................................: 121 115 :: Number of female producers: : $5,000 to $9,999 ...........................................: 139 130 :: 1 producer ...........................................: 685 657 $10,000 to $24,999 .........................................: 132 109 :: 2 producers ..........................................: 64 57 $25,000 to $49,999 .........................................: 64 62 :: 3 producers ..........................................: 5 9 $50,000 or more ............................................: 267 239 :: 4 producers ..........................................: 3 2 : :: 5 or more producers ..................................: 8 5 COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: Farms reporting- : : :: Internet access ..........................................: 930 846 CCC loans .............................................farms: 3 1 :: Dial-up ................................................: 26 37 $1,000: (D) (D) :: Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .........: 429 (NA) Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : :: Cellular data plan (see text) ..........................: 593 330 Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : :: Satellite ..............................................: 284 249 Enhancement Program payments .........................farms: 37 37 :: Don't know .............................................: 59 85 $1,000: 352 752 :: Other ..................................................: 14 22 Other Federal farm program payments ...................farms: 96 172 :: : $1,000: 5,091 2,352 :: Farms by number of households sharing : : :: in net income of operation: : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: 1 household ..............................................: 869 827 CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: 2 households .............................................: 152 168 : :: 3 households .............................................: 20 28 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...........................: 57 76 :: 4 households .............................................: 34 11 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .........................: 30 43 :: 5 or more households .....................................: 16 5 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..........................: 12 9 :: : Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : :: : production (1114) .........................................: 27 8 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 60. Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish Origin Producers - Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ...........................................number: 1,341 1,258 :: Age group: : : :: Under 25 years ..........................................: 45 24 Sex of producers: : :: 25 to 34 years ..........................................: 127 77 Male ....................................................: 861 813 :: 35 to 44 years ..........................................: 268 207 Female ..................................................: 480 445 :: 45 to 54 years ..........................................: 260 328 : :: 55 to 64 years ..........................................: 335 362 Hired managers ............................................: 122 107 :: 65 to 74 years ..........................................: 231 209 : :: 75 years and over .......................................: 75 51 Primary occupation: : :: : Farming .................................................: 607 553 :: Average age .............................................: 52.3 53.6 Other ...................................................: 734 705 :: : : :: Young producers (see text) ................................: 172 (NA) Place of residence: : :: : On farm operated ........................................: 990 1,010 :: Producers by race: : Not on farm operated ....................................: 351 248 :: American Indian or Alaska Native ........................: 21 13 : :: Asian ...................................................: 2 4 Days of work off farm: : :: Black or African American ...............................: 6 3 None ....................................................: 440 407 :: Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...............: 8 6 Any .....................................................: 901 851 :: White ...................................................: 1,271 1,202 1 to 49 days ..........................................: 141 107 :: More than one race reported .............................: 33 30 50 to 99 days .........................................: 62 73 :: : 100 to 199 days .......................................: 131 100 :: Military service: : 200 days or more ......................................: 567 571 :: Never served or only on active duty for training in : : :: the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..............: 1,256 1,135 Years on present farm: : :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...............: 85 123 2 years or less .........................................: 108 98 :: : 3 or 4 years ............................................: 196 150 :: Number of persons living in producers' households .........: 2,754 2,816 5 to 9 years ............................................: 290 168 :: : 10 years or more ........................................: 747 842 :: On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : : :: Day-to-day decisions ....................................: 1,165 1,067 Years operating any farm: : :: Land use and/or crop decisions ..........................: 905 922 5 years or less .........................................: 294 226 :: Livestock decisions .....................................: 860 792 6 to 10 years ...........................................: 266 131 :: Marketing decisions (see text) ..........................: 713 (NA) 11 years or more ........................................: 781 901 :: Record keeping and/or financial management ..............: 828 896 : :: Estate planning or succession planning ..................: 603 649 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This page is intentionally blank to preserve table continuity. Table 61. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Any producer reporting race as - : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian : : Black or African : All farms : or Alaska Native only : Asian only : American only :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ......................................................number: 22,877 24,996 236 205 124 91 17 11 Land in farms ...............................................acres: 11,547,963 11,691,912 536,981 423,470 42,266 42,858 6,449 701 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 5,785 6,673 57 59 39 24 11 5 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 6,977 7,337 77 75 29 12 2 4 50 to 179 acres ..................................................: 3,901 4,161 48 33 24 13 1 1 180 to 499 acres .................................................: 2,515 2,786 24 18 9 15 1 - 500 acres or more ................................................: 3,699 (NA) 30 20 23 27 2 1 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .........................................farms: 21,588 23,409 211 193 111 85 17 10 acres: 7,737,908 7,877,743 514,231 406,230 25,497 15,011 (D) (D) Rented or leased land in farms ..............................farms: 5,752 6,656 64 47 46 39 3 2 acres: 3,810,055 3,814,169 22,750 17,240 16,769 27,847 (D) (D) : TENURE : : Full owners .................................................farms: 17,125 18,340 172 158 78 52 14 9 acres: 4,752,115 5,059,886 505,992 393,850 16,454 4,310 (D) (D) Part owners .................................................farms: 4,463 5,069 39 35 33 33 3 1 acres: 5,825,698 5,531,951 26,050 28,151 22,855 30,880 (D) (D) Tenants .....................................................farms: 1,289 1,587 25 12 13 6 - 1 acres: 970,150 1,100,075 4,939 1,469 2,957 7,668 - (D) : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total .......................................................farms: 22,877 24,996 236 205 124 91 17 11 $1,000: 11,024,607 7,697,044 19,997 8,749 62,586 51,894 504 (D) : Market value of agricultural products sold ................farms: 22,877 24,996 236 205 124 91 17 11 $1,000: 10,892,201 7,567,439 17,464 6,637 61,430 51,055 504 202 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...........farms: 10,455 12,384 94 81 72 58 4 6 $1,000: 4,764,793 3,210,834 10,549 1,417 57,289 48,933 218 200 Livestock, poultry, and their products ..................farms: 10,666 12,305 117 140 45 37 11 3 $1,000: 6,127,408 4,356,606 6,915 5,220 4,141 2,121 286 2 Government payments .......................................farms: 4,296 6,083 42 26 24 38 - 3 $1,000: 132,405 129,605 2,533 2,112 1,156 840 - (D) : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 .................................................: 5,317 6,379 65 48 17 6 6 5 $1,000 to $2,499 .................................................: 2,873 2,927 18 38 11 12 2 - $2,500 to $4,999 .................................................: 2,357 2,631 21 37 20 5 2 - $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 2,526 2,572 20 14 13 11 1 5 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 2,368 2,622 37 16 13 9 3 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 1,551 1,651 12 11 17 6 - - $50,000 or more ..................................................: 5,885 (NA) 63 41 33 42 3 1 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans ...................................................farms: 39 139 - 1 - - - - $1,000: 5,255 9,073 - (D) - - - - Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Program payments ...............................farms: 1,681 1,773 14 9 10 5 - 2 $1,000: 19,925 28,550 (D) (D) 46 30 - (D) Other Federal farm program payments .........................farms: 3,041 5,486 33 24 16 36 - 3 $1,000: 112,481 101,055 (D) (D) 1,110 810 - (D) : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .................................: 1,681 2,052 10 13 28 12 1 2 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...............................: 767 833 5 3 15 16 - - Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ................................: 401 374 4 7 8 4 - - Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ..........: 555 439 8 - 3 4 1 2 Other crop farming (1119) ........................................: 7,395 7,434 58 44 28 24 1 4 Tobacco farming (11191) ........................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .........................................: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ......................: 7,395 7,434 58 44 28 24 1 4 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ........................: 6,883 8,137 80 66 23 11 8 3 Cattle feedlots (112112) .........................................: 132 144 - 6 1 - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .........................: 334 501 - - 1 4 - - Hog and pig farming (1122) .......................................: 179 215 2 6 - 3 - - Poultry and egg production (1123) ................................: 601 291 5 9 - - - - Sheep and goat farming (1124) ....................................: 1,092 1,190 14 21 6 2 3 - Aquaculture and other : animal production (1125, 1129) ..................................: 2,857 3,386 50 30 11 11 3 - : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization: : Operation more than 50 percent owned : by one producer's household and/or : extended family .............................................: 21,570 23,907 217 195 107 89 16 11 Limited Liability Company ....................................: 3,390 2,649 38 14 36 17 2 2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 61. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Any producer reporting race as - con. : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : Native Hawaiian or : : Any producer reporting : Other Pacific Islander only : White only : more than one race :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ......................................................number: 36 27 22,660 24,797 293 267 Land in farms ...............................................acres: 8,200 2,336 11,126,600 11,300,458 73,672 49,689 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 10 - 5,735 6,624 89 92 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 14 22 6,908 7,267 97 99 50 to 179 acres ..................................................: 6 3 3,852 4,125 60 36 180 to 499 acres .................................................: 3 - 2,501 2,769 17 19 500 acres or more ................................................: 3 2 3,664 4,012 30 21 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .........................................farms: 31 24 21,390 23,230 272 258 acres: 2,440 (D) 7,361,083 7,508,844 30,865 34,960 Rented or leased land in farms ..............................farms: 12 7 5,682 6,591 69 59 acres: 5,760 (D) 3,765,517 3,791,614 42,807 14,729 : TENURE : : Full owners .................................................farms: 24 20 16,978 18,206 224 208 acres: 1,252 578 4,385,152 4,698,692 17,042 26,301 Part owners .................................................farms: 7 4 4,412 5,024 48 50 acres: 6,823 1,728 5,774,612 5,509,459 54,774 22,197 Tenants .....................................................farms: 5 3 1,270 1,567 21 9 acres: 125 30 966,836 1,092,307 1,856 1,191 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total .......................................................farms: 36 27 22,660 24,797 293 267 $1,000: 10,484 2,742 10,968,386 7,664,913 29,051 68,443 : Market value of agricultural products sold ................farms: 36 27 22,660 24,797 293 267 $1,000: 10,409 (D) 10,836,779 7,536,244 28,425 67,865 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...........farms: 14 15 10,357 12,282 111 113 $1,000: 1,697 (D) 4,716,242 3,183,677 25,750 18,144 Livestock, poultry, and their products ..................farms: 26 12 10,555 12,195 155 150 $1,000: 8,712 2,055 6,120,537 4,352,566 2,675 49,721 Government payments .......................................farms: 5 3 4,260 6,047 45 28 $1,000: 76 (D) 131,606 128,669 626 579 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 .................................................: 4 5 5,276 6,319 69 100 $1,000 to $2,499 .................................................: 7 2 2,850 2,912 51 27 $2,500 to $4,999 .................................................: 2 5 2,331 2,602 39 33 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 2 6 2,497 2,545 42 45 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 4 2 2,349 2,616 36 14 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 6 1 1,531 1,646 12 2 $50,000 or more ..................................................: 11 6 5,826 6,157 44 46 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans ...................................................farms: - 1 39 138 - - $1,000: - (D) 5,255 (D) - - Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Program payments ...............................farms: - 1 1,666 1,766 26 6 $1,000: - (D) 19,687 28,492 165 131 Other Federal farm program payments .........................farms: 5 3 3,007 5,450 28 24 $1,000: 76 (D) 111,919 100,177 462 447 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .................................: 1 1 1,671 2,039 10 7 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...............................: 3 - 754 821 10 12 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ................................: 2 1 391 372 13 6 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ..........: - - 554 439 3 3 Other crop farming (1119) ........................................: 6 11 7,338 7,378 89 71 Tobacco farming (11191) ........................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .........................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ......................: 6 11 7,338 7,378 89 71 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ........................: 15 6 6,798 8,077 85 65 Cattle feedlots (112112) .........................................: - - 131 144 - 2 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .........................: - - 333 498 - 5 Hog and pig farming (1122) .......................................: 2 - 179 209 2 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ................................: - - 597 285 16 7 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ....................................: 3 - 1,083 1,167 27 32 Aquaculture and other : animal production (1125, 1129) ..................................: 4 8 2,831 3,368 38 49 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization: : Operation more than 50 percent owned : by one producer's household and/or : extended family .............................................: 32 24 21,368 23,715 280 250 Limited Liability Company ....................................: 5 1 3,364 2,631 24 16 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 61. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Any producer reporting race as - : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian : : Black or African : All farms : or Alaska Native only : Asian only : American only :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by- - Con. : : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual .........................................: 18,427 20,633 174 170 84 56 14 11 Partnership ..................................................: 1,752 1,869 22 11 24 6 1 - Corporation ..................................................: 2,145 1,882 18 11 12 24 2 - Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : association, American Indian Reservation, etc. ..............: 553 612 22 13 4 5 - - : Number of producers: : 1 producer ...................................................: 6,958 9,077 67 50 13 19 - 2 2 producers ..................................................: 12,840 13,456 123 130 65 51 10 9 3 producers ..................................................: 1,621 1,486 23 15 16 15 3 - 4 producers ..................................................: 910 684 19 10 20 6 4 - 5 or more producers ..........................................: 548 293 4 - 10 - - - : Number of male producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 17,639 20,068 175 168 76 60 11 11 2 producers ................................................: 2,533 2,286 28 22 21 22 4 - 3 producers ................................................: 838 542 11 1 14 2 2 - 4 producers ................................................: 193 181 - 1 5 3 - - 5 or more producers ........................................: 173 75 2 - 6 - - - : Number of female producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 14,310 15,063 155 138 72 58 10 9 2 producers ................................................: 1,105 932 24 19 21 5 5 - 3 producers ................................................: 163 118 1 - - - - - 4 producers ................................................: 83 36 - - 6 - - - 5 or more producers ........................................: 58 23 1 - - - - - : Farms reporting- : Internet access ................................................: 19,417 20,972 205 167 91 85 14 11 Dial-up ......................................................: 537 608 5 12 2 1 - - Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ...............: 10,022 (NA) 86 (NA) 53 (NA) 10 (NA) Cellular data plan (see text) ................................: 12,438 7,538 133 50 52 26 9 3 Satellite ....................................................: 5,457 5,394 56 32 28 15 3 2 Don't know ...................................................: 905 1,926 22 12 5 7 - 3 Other ........................................................: 304 1,046 - 5 - 5 - - : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ....................................................: 18,831 20,897 195 174 90 73 12 9 2 households ...................................................: 2,888 2,964 32 23 25 11 5 1 3 households ...................................................: 661 646 5 6 9 6 - 1 4 households ...................................................: 291 287 4 2 - - - - 5 or more households ...........................................: 206 202 - - - 1 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 61. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Any producer reporting race as - con. : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : Native Hawaiian or : : Any producer reporting : Other Pacific Islander only : White only : more than one race :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by- - Con. : : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual .........................................: 32 24 18,264 20,469 239 226 Partnership ..................................................: 1 - 1,733 1,857 11 20 Corporation ..................................................: - - 2,130 1,869 32 17 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : association, American Indian Reservation, etc. ..............: 3 3 533 602 11 4 : Number of producers: : 1 producer ...................................................: 5 6 6,807 8,939 66 61 2 producers ..................................................: 25 18 12,791 13,403 172 172 3 producers ..................................................: 6 3 1,607 1,480 22 17 4 producers ..................................................: - - 907 682 24 16 5 or more producers ..........................................: - - 548 293 9 1 : Number of male producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 26 23 17,477 19,902 224 212 2 producers ................................................: 4 1 2,525 2,275 22 41 3 producers ................................................: 3 3 828 540 19 4 4 producers ................................................: - - 192 179 7 - 5 or more producers ........................................: - - 173 75 6 1 : Number of female producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 24 17 14,231 14,999 196 188 2 producers ................................................: 3 - 1,099 930 19 13 3 producers ................................................: - - 163 118 - 1 4 producers ................................................: - - 83 36 - - 5 or more producers ........................................: - - 58 23 6 - : Farms reporting- : Internet access ................................................: 31 27 19,245 20,821 254 229 Dial-up ......................................................: 1 - 535 597 4 6 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ...............: 14 (NA) 9,945 (NA) 118 (NA) Cellular data plan (see text) ................................: 12 9 12,326 7,497 166 55 Satellite ....................................................: 15 14 5,400 5,357 81 77 Don't know ...................................................: - 1 891 1,912 10 11 Other ........................................................: - - 303 1,036 8 23 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ....................................................: 33 23 18,650 20,724 252 232 2 households ...................................................: 2 - 2,866 2,949 23 29 3 households ...................................................: 1 4 656 636 10 4 4 households ...................................................: - - 282 287 8 2 5 or more households ...........................................: - - 206 201 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 62. Selected Producer Characteristics by Race: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : All producers reporting race as - : :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian : : Black or African : All producers : or Alaska Native only : Asian only : American only :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ..................................................number: 43,333 44,355 290 241 144 106 19 11 : Sex of producers: : Male ...........................................................: 26,384 27,125 179 138 68 66 10 5 Female .........................................................: 16,949 17,230 111 103 76 40 9 6 : Hired managers ...................................................: 3,382 3,253 6 7 23 32 1 - : Primary occupation: : Farming ........................................................: 17,793 18,390 99 97 56 65 10 4 Other ..........................................................: 25,540 25,965 191 144 88 41 9 7 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...............................................: 33,141 35,823 197 209 74 87 16 9 Not on farm operated ...........................................: 10,192 8,532 93 32 70 19 3 2 : Days of work off farm: : None ...........................................................: 16,151 16,755 78 85 56 46 6 6 Any ............................................................: 27,182 27,600 212 156 88 60 13 5 1 to 49 days .................................................: 4,566 4,261 33 23 13 10 2 3 50 to 99 days ................................................: 2,032 2,044 18 18 10 2 3 - 100 to 199 days ..............................................: 3,482 3,894 31 8 12 12 2 - 200 days or more .............................................: 17,102 17,401 130 107 53 36 6 2 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ................................................: 2,561 3,565 16 18 26 10 2 - 3 or 4 years ...................................................: 4,392 4,127 22 28 14 10 3 - 5 to 9 years ...................................................: 9,426 6,651 88 34 28 17 5 - 10 years or more ...............................................: 26,954 30,012 164 161 76 69 9 11 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ................................................: 7,099 7,379 53 45 47 22 6 - 6 to 10 years ..................................................: 7,699 5,654 54 30 20 15 5 - 11 years or more ...............................................: 28,535 31,322 183 166 77 69 8 11 : Age group: : Under 25 years .................................................: 832 613 11 4 4 3 6 - 25 to 34 years .................................................: 3,027 3,269 27 6 26 11 2 - 35 to 44 years .................................................: 6,911 6,241 39 45 26 14 2 - 45 to 54 years .................................................: 7,320 7,947 57 51 25 18 6 2 55 to 64 years .................................................: 10,123 12,333 77 64 23 30 - 4 65 to 74 years .................................................: 10,095 9,484 54 58 25 23 1 5 75 years and over...............................................: 5,025 4,468 25 13 15 7 2 - : Average age ....................................................: 56.6 56.4 54.2 56.1 52.0 55.1 41.2 62.9 : Young producers (see text) .......................................: 3,859 (NA) 38 (NA) 30 (NA) 8 (NA) : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .................: 1,341 1,258 21 13 2 4 6 3 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) .....................: 39,671 39,742 254 200 141 102 16 8 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ......................: 3,662 4,613 36 41 3 4 3 3 : Number of persons living in producers' households ................: 86,167 88,752 600 436 193 189 31 8 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ...........................................: 37,172 38,434 249 214 115 94 16 9 Land use and/or crop decisions .................................: 32,598 34,157 230 186 80 88 12 6 Livestock decisions ............................................: 26,379 28,051 201 178 64 43 10 1 Marketing decisions (see text) .................................: 25,823 (NA) 162 (NA) 69 (NA) 11 (NA) Record keeping and/or financial management .....................: 30,863 32,900 191 187 90 85 10 4 Estate planning or succession planning..........................: 23,727 24,508 164 144 77 63 6 2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 62. Selected Producer Characteristics by Race: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All producers reporting race as - con. : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : Native Hawaiian or : : All producers reporting : Other Pacific Islander only : White only : more than one race :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ..................................................number: 42 27 42,509 43,673 329 297 : Sex of producers: : Male ...........................................................: 23 25 25,873 26,708 231 183 Female .........................................................: 19 2 16,636 16,965 98 114 : Hired managers ...................................................: 3 4 3,343 3,203 6 7 : Primary occupation: : Farming ........................................................: 17 11 17,500 18,096 111 117 Other ..........................................................: 25 16 25,009 25,577 218 180 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...............................................: 31 25 32,589 35,224 234 269 Not on farm operated ...........................................: 11 2 9,920 8,449 95 28 : Days of work off farm: : None ...........................................................: 19 9 15,902 16,519 90 90 Any ............................................................: 23 18 26,607 27,154 239 207 1 to 49 days .................................................: 3 - 4,479 4,190 36 35 50 to 99 days ................................................: 2 - 1,977 1,996 22 28 100 to 199 days ..............................................: 1 5 3,408 3,835 28 34 200 days or more .............................................: 17 13 16,743 17,133 153 110 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ................................................: 4 - 2,464 3,498 49 39 3 or 4 years ...................................................: 6 7 4,303 4,035 44 47 5 to 9 years ...................................................: 11 7 9,209 6,556 85 37 10 years or more ...............................................: 21 13 26,533 29,584 151 174 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ................................................: 5 7 6,906 7,227 82 78 6 to 10 years ..................................................: 17 7 7,527 5,570 76 32 11 years or more ...............................................: 20 13 28,076 30,876 171 187 : Age group: : Under 25 years .................................................: - - 811 602 - 4 25 to 34 years .................................................: 4 1 2,947 3,218 21 33 35 to 44 years .................................................: 4 11 6,753 6,125 87 46 45 to 54 years .................................................: 10 6 7,153 7,810 69 60 55 to 64 years .................................................: 4 7 9,940 12,150 79 78 65 to 74 years .................................................: 17 1 9,940 9,341 58 56 75 years and over...............................................: 3 1 4,965 4,427 15 20 : Average age ....................................................: 58.3 49.9 56.7 56.5 53.0 54.2 : Young producers (see text) .......................................: 4 (NA) 3,758 (NA) 21 (NA) : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .................: 8 6 1,271 1,202 33 30 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) .....................: 37 24 38,933 39,146 290 262 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ......................: 5 3 3,576 4,527 39 35 : Number of persons living in producers' households ................: 99 99 84,519 87,411 725 609 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ...........................................: 38 26 36,471 37,837 283 254 Land use and/or crop decisions .................................: 27 24 31,998 33,613 251 240 Livestock decisions ............................................: 31 19 25,865 27,619 208 191 Marketing decisions (see text) .................................: 29 (NA) 25,366 (NA) 186 (NA) Record keeping and/or financial management .....................: 25 20 30,304 32,392 243 212 Estate planning or succession planning..........................: 30 13 23,279 24,118 171 168 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 63. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race and Ethnicity: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Any producer reporting race as - :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : American Indian or Alaska : Asian : Black or African American : Native alone or in combination : alone or in combination : alone or in combination : with other races : with other races : with other races :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ......................................................number: 440 388 179 142 35 27 Land in farms ...............................................acres: 564,360 453,326 59,671 54,367 9,104 1,984 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 111 122 63 40 18 12 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 157 143 37 28 10 10 50 to 179 acres ..................................................: 92 66 37 15 2 2 180 to 499 acres .................................................: 35 26 13 26 2 - 500 acres or more ................................................: 45 31 29 33 3 3 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .........................................farms: 401 374 162 131 35 26 acres: 533,554 429,575 33,124 19,806 (D) 1,940 Rented or leased land in farms ..............................farms: 106 86 58 54 7 4 acres: 30,806 23,751 26,547 34,561 (D) 44 : TENURE : : Full owners .................................................farms: 334 302 121 88 28 23 acres: 520,228 410,619 19,013 7,832 (D) 1,429 Part owners .................................................farms: 67 72 41 43 7 3 acres: 38,463 41,228 36,986 37,714 (D) (D) Tenants .....................................................farms: 39 14 17 11 - 1 acres: 5,669 1,479 3,672 8,821 - (D) : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total .......................................................farms: 440 388 179 142 35 27 $1,000: 31,992 62,152 72,790 64,125 801 464 : Market value of agricultural products sold ................farms: 440 388 179 142 35 27 $1,000: 29,241 59,746 71,389 63,169 (D) 444 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...........farms: 170 159 87 76 14 15 $1,000: 20,340 10,836 67,020 55,372 (D) 433 Livestock, poultry, and their products ..................farms: 231 251 69 55 18 6 $1,000: 8,901 48,911 4,370 7,797 411 11 Government payments .......................................farms: 66 42 39 45 2 5 $1,000: 2,750 2,406 1,400 956 (D) 19 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 .................................................: 125 117 24 33 10 10 $1,000 to $2,499 .................................................: 53 60 22 12 6 2 $2,500 to $4,999 .................................................: 42 60 31 6 5 5 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 50 45 23 17 1 5 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 59 28 22 9 5 2 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 20 12 19 6 2 - $50,000 or more ..................................................: 91 66 38 59 6 3 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans ...................................................farms: - 1 - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Program payments ...............................farms: 26 14 24 6 1 2 $1,000: 1,701 1,663 105 32 (D) (D) Other Federal farm program payments .........................farms: 54 36 17 43 1 5 $1,000: 1,049 743 1,295 925 (D) (D) : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .................................: 13 15 30 15 1 4 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...............................: 14 15 16 16 - - Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ................................: 10 9 11 4 6 1 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ..........: 9 1 5 4 1 4 Other crop farming (1119) ........................................: 115 86 47 46 7 8 Tobacco farming (11191) ........................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .........................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ......................: 115 86 47 46 7 8 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ........................: 144 121 40 19 11 7 Cattle feedlots (112112) .........................................: - 8 1 - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .........................: - 5 1 4 - - Hog and pig farming (1122) .......................................: 2 10 - 3 - - Poultry and egg production (1123) ................................: 15 14 4 2 - - Sheep and goat farming (1124) ....................................: 38 36 7 11 4 3 Aquaculture and other : animal production (1125, 1129) ..................................: 80 68 17 18 5 - : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization: : Operation more than 50 percent owned : by one producer's household and/or : extended family .............................................: 420 373 151 128 34 25 Limited Liability Company ....................................: 55 19 41 28 4 2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 63. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race and Ethnicity: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Any producer reporting race as - con. : Any producer reporting :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: ethnicity as : Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific : : Hispanic, : Islander alone or in combination : White alone or in combination : Latino, or : with other races : with other races : Spanish origin :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ......................................................number: 70 42 22,753 24,880 1,091 1,039 Land in farms ...............................................acres: 32,725 8,806 11,165,574 11,308,539 534,607 534,884 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .....................................................: 27 6 5,754 6,656 368 353 10 to 49 acres ...................................................: 26 29 6,939 7,291 344 339 50 to 179 acres ..................................................: 6 3 3,876 4,143 145 131 180 to 499 acres .................................................: 4 - 2,506 2,773 96 81 500 acres or more ................................................: 7 4 3,678 4,017 138 135 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .........................................farms: 64 37 21,479 23,306 1,031 979 acres: 3,968 7,378 7,372,477 7,513,085 409,143 404,014 Rented or leased land in farms ..............................farms: 18 11 5,709 6,613 246 265 acres: 28,757 1,428 3,793,097 3,795,454 125,464 130,870 : TENURE : : Full owners .................................................farms: 52 31 17,044 18,267 845 774 acres: 1,537 6,062 4,392,494 4,700,550 127,771 199,401 Part owners .................................................farms: 12 6 4,435 5,039 186 205 acres: 30,752 2,686 5,805,244 5,514,501 379,639 296,777 Tenants .....................................................farms: 6 5 1,274 1,574 60 60 acres: 436 58 967,836 1,093,488 27,197 38,706 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total .......................................................farms: 70 42 22,753 24,880 1,091 1,039 $1,000: 13,406 3,446 10,982,616 7,668,843 798,514 660,154 : Market value of agricultural products sold ................farms: 70 42 22,753 24,880 1,091 1,039 $1,000: 13,184 3,333 10,850,723 7,540,132 793,072 657,051 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ...........farms: 24 20 10,399 12,325 434 488 $1,000: 3,988 937 4,728,976 3,186,464 230,800 183,735 Livestock, poultry, and their products ..................farms: 49 25 10,605 12,249 590 560 $1,000: 9,196 2,396 6,121,747 4,353,668 562,272 473,316 Government payments .......................................farms: 9 5 4,274 6,051 123 188 $1,000: 222 113 131,893 128,711 5,443 3,104 : FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : : Less than $1,000 .................................................: 10 9 5,291 6,343 235 242 $1,000 to $2,499 .................................................: 12 4 2,864 2,924 133 142 $2,500 to $4,999 .................................................: 13 6 2,341 2,608 121 115 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................................: 4 12 2,517 2,567 139 130 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................................: 10 2 2,357 2,618 132 109 $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................................: 6 1 1,536 1,646 64 62 $50,000 or more ..................................................: 15 8 5,847 6,174 267 239 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : : CCC loans ...................................................farms: - 1 39 138 3 1 $1,000: - (D) 5,255 (D) (D) (D) Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Program payments ...............................farms: - 1 1,675 1,766 37 37 $1,000: - (D) 19,787 28,492 352 752 Other Federal farm program payments .........................farms: 9 5 3,021 5,454 96 172 $1,000: 222 (D) 112,107 100,219 5,091 2,352 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .................................: 2 1 1,676 2,044 57 76 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...............................: 3 - 762 823 30 43 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ................................: 4 1 394 374 12 9 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ..........: - - 555 439 27 8 Other crop farming (1119) ........................................: 17 14 7,364 7,403 277 267 Tobacco farming (11191) ........................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .........................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ......................: 17 14 7,364 7,403 277 267 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ........................: 26 9 6,832 8,094 413 371 Cattle feedlots (112112) .........................................: - - 131 144 6 10 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .........................: - - 333 500 41 38 Hog and pig farming (1122) .......................................: 4 - 179 213 6 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ................................: 2 - 601 285 41 23 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ....................................: 5 8 1,088 1,181 65 80 Aquaculture and other : animal production (1125, 1129) ..................................: 7 9 2,838 3,380 116 106 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms by- : : Type of organization: : Operation more than 50 percent owned : by one producer's household and/or : extended family .............................................: 65 39 21,461 23,796 1,033 981 Limited Liability Company ....................................: 7 1 3,373 2,637 155 122 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 63. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race and Ethnicity: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Any producer reporting race as - :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : American Indian or Alaska : Asian : Black or African American : Native alone or in combination : alone or in combination : alone or in combination : with other races : with other races : with other races :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by- - Con. : : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual .........................................: 351 337 119 85 30 23 Partnership ..................................................: 26 14 27 23 1 - Corporation ..................................................: 33 21 26 28 4 2 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : association, American Indian Reservation, etc. ..............: 30 16 7 6 - 2 : Number of producers: : 1 producer ...................................................: 123 88 18 33 2 6 2 producers ..................................................: 245 255 94 82 25 17 3 producers ..................................................: 31 27 23 15 3 2 4 producers ..................................................: 34 17 28 12 5 2 5 or more producers ..........................................: 7 1 16 - - - : Number of male producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 341 315 110 102 28 23 2 producers ................................................: 37 46 30 31 5 4 3 producers ................................................: 21 5 19 2 2 - 4 producers ................................................: 6 1 6 3 - - 5 or more producers ........................................: 2 1 12 - - - : Number of female producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 290 275 105 86 25 19 2 producers ................................................: 37 23 27 11 6 2 3 producers ................................................: 1 1 - - - - 4 producers ................................................: - - 6 - - - 5 or more producers ........................................: 1 - 6 - - - : Farms reporting- : Internet access ................................................: 384 320 134 133 31 23 Dial-up ......................................................: 9 16 2 1 1 - Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ...............: 167 (NA) 75 (NA) 18 (NA) Cellular data plan (see text) ................................: 254 87 77 34 17 11 Satellite ....................................................: 107 95 44 20 10 6 Don't know ...................................................: 29 22 6 7 1 3 Other ........................................................: 4 18 2 11 2 2 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ....................................................: 374 330 133 122 28 20 2 households ...................................................: 45 45 34 13 7 5 3 households ...................................................: 11 9 12 6 - 2 4 households ...................................................: 10 4 - - - - 5 or more households ...........................................: - - - 1 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 63. Selected Farm Characteristics by Race and Ethnicity: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Any producer reporting race as - con. : Any producer reporting :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: ethnicity as : Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific : : Hispanic, : Islander alone or in combination : White alone or in combination : Latino, or : with other races : with other races : Spanish origin :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by- - Con. : : Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual .........................................: 64 39 18,340 20,550 870 837 Partnership ..................................................: 2 - 1,736 1,857 88 94 Corporation ..................................................: 1 - 2,138 1,871 122 82 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : association, American Indian Reservation, etc. ..............: 3 3 539 602 11 26 : Number of producers: : 1 producer ...................................................: 9 14 6,872 8,997 264 280 2 producers ..................................................: 41 25 12,808 13,428 624 593 3 producers ..................................................: 11 3 1,618 1,480 79 81 4 producers ..................................................: 6 - 907 682 81 68 5 or more producers ..........................................: 3 - 548 293 43 17 : Number of male producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 49 36 17,544 19,969 835 813 2 producers ................................................: 4 1 2,527 2,282 119 126 3 producers ................................................: 6 3 837 540 61 33 4 producers ................................................: 6 - 192 179 35 19 5 or more producers ........................................: - - 173 75 8 5 : Number of female producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 42 26 14,265 15,026 685 657 2 producers ................................................: 11 - 1,099 930 64 57 3 producers ................................................: - - 163 118 5 9 4 producers ................................................: - - 83 36 3 2 5 or more producers ........................................: - - 58 23 8 5 : Farms reporting- : Internet access ................................................: 62 38 19,323 20,880 930 846 Dial-up ......................................................: 1 - 535 599 26 37 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ...............: 21 (NA) 9,982 (NA) 429 (NA) Cellular data plan (see text) ................................: 32 10 12,374 7,508 593 330 Satellite ....................................................: 28 20 5,421 5,372 284 249 Don't know ...................................................: 3 2 896 1,921 59 85 Other ........................................................: - 2 304 1,041 14 22 : Farms by number of households sharing : in net income of operation: : 1 household ....................................................: 59 38 18,731 20,796 869 827 2 households ...................................................: 2 - 2,869 2,958 152 168 3 households ...................................................: 7 4 657 638 20 28 4 households ...................................................: 2 - 290 287 34 11 5 or more households ...........................................: - - 206 201 16 5 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 64. Selected Producer Characteristics by Race and Ethnicity: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All producers reporting race as - :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : American Indian or Alaska : Asian : Black or African American : Native alone or in combination : alone or in combination : alone or in combination : with other races : with other races : with other races :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ..................................................number: 517 461 208 159 38 27 : Sex of producers: : Male ...........................................................: 343 287 111 88 18 12 Female .........................................................: 174 174 97 71 20 15 : Hired managers ...................................................: 7 8 27 38 1 - : Primary occupation: : Farming ........................................................: 187 187 69 86 13 6 Other ..........................................................: 330 274 139 73 25 21 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...............................................: 358 416 116 127 35 23 Not on farm operated ...........................................: 159 45 92 32 3 4 : Days of work off farm: : None ...........................................................: 140 157 73 56 11 10 Any ............................................................: 377 304 135 103 27 17 1 to 49 days .................................................: 54 50 21 15 4 6 50 to 99 days ................................................: 38 45 11 3 3 2 100 to 199 days ..............................................: 49 31 18 20 5 - 200 days or more .............................................: 236 178 85 65 15 9 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ................................................: 47 51 38 12 3 - 3 or 4 years ...................................................: 50 56 27 23 5 - 5 to 9 years ...................................................: 140 66 46 21 12 1 10 years or more ...............................................: 280 288 97 103 18 26 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ................................................: 106 99 63 38 12 - 6 to 10 years ..................................................: 97 58 39 18 9 1 11 years or more ...............................................: 314 304 106 103 17 26 : Age group: : Under 25 years .................................................: 11 8 4 3 6 - 25 to 34 years .................................................: 44 33 30 17 2 - 35 to 44 years .................................................: 83 80 57 25 7 - 45 to 54 years .................................................: 91 90 45 32 9 5 55 to 64 years .................................................: 141 116 29 46 7 11 65 to 74 years .................................................: 108 103 27 28 4 11 75 years and over...............................................: 39 31 16 8 3 - : Average age ....................................................: 55.0 55.2 49.7 53.9 48.4 62.6 : Young producers (see text) .......................................: 55 (NA) 34 (NA) 8 (NA) : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .................: 53 38 3 9 7 5 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) .....................: 451 390 201 155 28 22 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ......................: 66 71 7 4 10 5 : Number of persons living in producers' households ................: 1,063 905 339 297 61 20 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ...........................................: 443 413 168 127 32 23 Land use and/or crop decisions .................................: 408 374 126 122 27 20 Livestock decisions ............................................: 358 332 88 65 23 12 Marketing decisions (see text) .................................: 298 (NA) 93 (NA) 24 (NA) Record keeping and/or financial management .....................: 365 344 130 122 27 17 Estate planning or succession planning..........................: 286 277 103 87 18 9 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 64. Selected Producer Characteristics by Race and Ethnicity: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : All producers reporting race as - con. : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: All producers reporting : Native Hawaiian or : : ethnicity as : Other Pacific Islander : White : Hispanic, : alone or in combination : alone or in combination : Latino, or : with other races : with other races : Spanish origin :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 : 2022 : 2017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ..................................................number: 78 42 42,831 43,966 1,341 1,258 : Sex of producers: : Male ...........................................................: 49 36 26,099 26,887 861 813 Female .........................................................: 29 6 16,732 17,079 480 445 : Hired managers ...................................................: 4 4 3,349 3,210 122 107 : Primary occupation: : Farming ........................................................: 25 17 17,611 18,212 607 553 Other ..........................................................: 53 25 25,220 25,754 734 705 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...............................................: 59 38 32,817 35,489 990 1,010 Not on farm operated ...........................................: 19 4 10,014 8,477 351 248 : Days of work off farm: : None ...........................................................: 30 15 15,991 16,608 440 407 Any ............................................................: 48 27 26,840 27,358 901 851 1 to 49 days .................................................: 11 - 4,514 4,225 141 107 50 to 99 days ................................................: 4 - 1,998 2,024 62 73 100 to 199 days ..............................................: 3 8 3,436 3,869 131 100 200 days or more .............................................: 30 19 16,892 17,240 567 571 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ................................................: 10 4 2,513 3,537 108 98 3 or 4 years ...................................................: 11 13 4,347 4,082 196 150 5 to 9 years ...................................................: 24 7 9,293 6,593 290 168 10 years or more ...............................................: 33 18 26,678 29,754 747 842 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ................................................: 15 15 6,988 7,305 294 226 6 to 10 years ..................................................: 28 7 7,602 5,602 266 131 11 years or more ...............................................: 35 20 28,241 31,059 781 901 : Age group: : Under 25 years .................................................: - - 811 606 45 24 25 to 34 years .................................................: 4 1 2,968 3,251 127 77 35 to 44 years .................................................: 17 11 6,839 6,171 268 207 45 to 54 years .................................................: 25 10 7,222 7,870 260 328 55 to 64 years .................................................: 11 13 10,014 12,228 335 362 65 to 74 years .................................................: 18 4 9,998 9,394 231 209 75 years and over...............................................: 3 3 4,979 4,446 75 51 : Average age ....................................................: 53.3 54.3 56.7 56.5 52.3 53.6 : Young producers (see text) .......................................: 4 (NA) 3,779 (NA) 172 (NA) : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .................: 13 6 1,300 1,232 1,341 1,258 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) .....................: 68 36 39,218 39,404 1,256 1,135 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ......................: 10 6 3,613 4,562 85 123 : Number of persons living in producers' households ................: 231 130 85,222 88,015 2,754 2,816 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ...........................................: 71 41 36,747 38,087 1,165 1,067 Land use and/or crop decisions .................................: 50 35 32,243 33,849 905 922 Livestock decisions ............................................: 58 30 26,066 27,806 860 792 Marketing decisions (see text) .................................: 51 (NA) 25,547 (NA) 713 (NA) Record keeping and/or financial management .....................: 49 31 30,541 32,601 828 896 Estate planning or succession planning..........................: 50 21 23,446 24,285 603 649 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 65. Selected Farm Characteristics - Farms with Producers with Military Service: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms ...............................................number: 3,449 4,371 :: : Land in farms ........................................acres: 1,257,195 1,453,057 :: Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ...: 85 58 : :: Other crop farming (1119) .................................: 1,170 1,345 FARMS BY SIZE : :: Tobacco farming (11191) .................................: - - : :: Cotton farming (11192) ..................................: - - 1 to 9 acres ..............................................: 917 1,231 :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : 10 to 49 acres ............................................: 1,220 1,496 :: other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ...............: 1,170 1,345 50 to 179 acres ...........................................: 624 773 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .................: 1,028 1,466 180 to 499 acres ..........................................: 353 367 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ..................................: 19 32 500 acres or more .........................................: 335 504 :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ..................: 18 27 : :: Hog and pig farming (1122) ................................: 14 34 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) .........................: 138 83 : :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) .............................: 202 207 Owned land in farms ..................................farms: 3,336 4,209 :: Aquaculture and other : acres: 975,399 1,004,997 :: animal production (1125, 1129) ...........................: 485 709 Rented or leased land in farms .......................farms: 507 739 :: : acres: 281,796 448,060 :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : :: : TENURE : :: Farms by- : : :: : Full owners ..........................................farms: 2,942 3,632 :: Type of organization: : acres: 593,971 654,355 :: Operation more than 50 percent owned : Part owners ..........................................farms: 394 577 :: by one producer's household and/or : acres: 621,204 667,996 :: extended family ......................................: 3,276 4,222 Tenants ..............................................farms: 113 162 :: Limited Liability Company .............................: 456 408 acres: 42,020 130,706 :: : : :: Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Family or individual ..................................: 2,829 3,678 SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: Partnership ...........................................: 254 305 : :: Corporation ...........................................: 237 248 Total ................................................farms: 3,449 4,371 :: Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : $1,000: 1,231,677 848,995 :: association, American Indian Reservation, etc. .......: 129 140 : :: : Market value of agricultural products sold .........farms: 3,449 4,371 :: Number of producers: : $1,000: 1,218,585 836,006 :: 1 producer ............................................: 798 1,226 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ....farms: 1,367 1,976 :: 2 producers ...........................................: 2,068 2,608 $1,000: 273,551 234,474 :: 3 producers ...........................................: 299 282 Livestock, poultry, and their products ...........farms: 1,554 2,178 :: 4 producers ...........................................: 154 176 $1,000: 945,033 601,532 :: 5 or more producers ...................................: 130 79 Government payments ................................farms: 553 787 :: : $1,000: 13,092 12,989 :: Number of male producers: : : :: 1 producer ..........................................: 2,704 3,617 FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 2 producers .........................................: 498 501 : :: 3 producers .........................................: 137 134 Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 963 1,322 :: 4 producers .........................................: 36 47 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 554 626 :: 5 or more producers .................................: 44 13 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 434 554 :: : $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 394 433 :: Number of female producers: : $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 358 498 :: 1 producer ..........................................: 2,130 2,680 $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 236 274 :: 2 producers .........................................: 225 174 $50,000 or more ...........................................: 510 664 :: 3 producers .........................................: 17 26 : :: 4 producers .........................................: 11 14 COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: 5 or more producers .................................: 24 2 AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: : : :: Farms reporting- : CCC loans ............................................farms: 2 14 :: Internet access .........................................: 2,863 3,565 $1,000: (D) 748 :: Dial-up ...............................................: 84 127 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : :: Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ........: 1,419 (NA) Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : :: Cellular data plan (see text) .........................: 1,751 1,218 Enhancement Program payments ........................farms: 303 277 :: Satellite .............................................: 908 982 $1,000: 2,727 3,786 :: Don't know ............................................: 135 359 Other Federal farm program payments ..................farms: 297 684 :: Other .................................................: 54 237 $1,000: 10,366 9,203 :: : : :: Farms by number of households sharing : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: in net income of operation: : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: 1 household .............................................: 2,758 3,652 : :: 2 households ............................................: 457 515 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..........................: 142 231 :: 3 households ............................................: 138 113 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ........................: 59 110 :: 4 households ............................................: 44 61 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .........................: 89 69 :: 5 or more households ....................................: 52 30 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 66. Producers with Military Service - Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ...........................................number: 3,662 4,613 :: Age group: : : :: Under 25 years ..........................................: 6 1 Sex of producers: : :: 25 to 34 years ..........................................: 67 81 Male ....................................................: 3,377 4,315 :: 35 to 44 years ..........................................: 364 275 Female ..................................................: 285 298 :: 45 to 54 years ..........................................: 409 514 : :: 55 to 64 years ..........................................: 561 739 Hired managers ............................................: 95 140 :: 65 to 74 years ..........................................: 1,029 1,768 : :: 75 years and over .......................................: 1,226 1,235 Primary occupation: : :: : Farming .................................................: 1,709 2,288 :: Average age .............................................: 66.1 66.6 Other ...................................................: 1,953 2,325 :: : : :: Young producers (see text) ................................: 73 (NA) Place of residence: : :: : On farm operated ........................................: 2,962 3,911 :: Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..........: 85 123 Not on farm operated ....................................: 700 702 :: : : :: Producers by race: : Days of work off farm: : :: American Indian or Alaska Native ........................: 36 41 None ....................................................: 1,740 2,204 :: Asian ...................................................: 3 4 Any .....................................................: 1,922 2,409 :: Black or African American ...............................: 3 3 1 to 49 days ..........................................: 335 394 :: Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...............: 5 3 50 to 99 days .........................................: 159 222 :: White ...................................................: 3,576 4,527 100 to 199 days .......................................: 244 408 :: More than one race reported .............................: 39 35 200 days or more ......................................: 1,184 1,385 :: : : :: Number of persons living in : Years on present farm: : :: producers' households ....................................: 8,151 9,993 2 years or less .........................................: 169 240 :: : 3 or 4 years ............................................: 338 378 :: On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : 5 to 9 years ............................................: 637 638 :: Day-to-day decisions ....................................: 3,244 4,176 10 years or more ........................................: 2,518 3,357 :: Land use and/or crop decisions ..........................: 2,887 3,871 : :: Livestock decisions .....................................: 2,331 3,172 Years operating any farm: : :: Marketing decisions (see text) ..........................: 2,106 (NA) 5 years or less .........................................: 509 630 :: Record keeping and/or financial management ..............: 2,506 3,447 6 to 10 years ...........................................: 579 516 :: Estate planning or succession planning ..................: 2,122 2,812 11 years or more ........................................: 2,574 3,467 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 67. Selected Farm Characteristics - Farms with Young Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 :: Characteristics : 2022 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms ...............................................number: 2,826 :: : Land in farms ........................................acres: 1,468,931 :: Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ...: 88 : :: Other crop farming (1119) .................................: 771 FARMS BY SIZE : :: Tobacco farming (11191) .................................: - : :: Cotton farming (11192) ..................................: - 1 to 9 acres ..............................................: 699 :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : 10 to 49 acres ............................................: 749 :: other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ...............: 771 50 to 179 acres ...........................................: 480 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .................: 820 180 to 499 acres ..........................................: 362 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ..................................: 12 500 acres or more .........................................: 536 :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ..................: 69 : :: Hog and pig farming (1122) ................................: 27 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) .........................: 90 : :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) .............................: 147 Owned land in farms ..................................farms: 2,398 :: Aquaculture and other : acres: 777,461 :: animal production (1125, 1129) ...........................: 330 Rented or leased land in farms .......................farms: 1,250 :: : acres: 691,470 :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : :: : TENURE : :: Farms by- : : :: : Full owners ..........................................farms: 1,576 :: Type of organization: : acres: 349,127 :: Operation more than 50 percent owned : Part owners ..........................................farms: 822 :: by one producer's household and/or : acres: 910,201 :: extended family ......................................: 2,610 Tenants ..............................................farms: 428 :: Limited Liability Company .............................: 667 acres: 209,603 :: : : :: Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Family or individual ..................................: 2,081 SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: Partnership ...........................................: 352 : :: Corporation ...........................................: 339 Total ................................................farms: 2,826 :: Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : $1,000: 1,886,141 :: association, American Indian Reservation, etc. .......: 54 : :: : Market value of agricultural products sold .........farms: 2,826 :: Number of producers: : $1,000: 1,866,187 :: 1 producer ............................................: 353 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ....farms: 1,431 :: 2 producers ...........................................: 1,166 $1,000: 1,132,466 :: 3 producers ...........................................: 678 Livestock, poultry, and their products ...........farms: 1,453 :: 4 producers ...........................................: 422 $1,000: 733,721 :: 5 or more producers ...................................: 207 Government payments ................................farms: 518 :: : $1,000: 19,953 :: Number of male producers: : : :: 1 producer ..........................................: 1,412 FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 2 producers .........................................: 847 : :: 3 producers .........................................: 339 Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 537 :: 4 producers .........................................: 89 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 271 :: 5 or more producers .................................: 31 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 237 :: : $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 261 :: Number of female producers: : $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 262 :: 1 producer ..........................................: 1,614 $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 239 :: 2 producers .........................................: 463 $50,000 or more ...........................................: 1,019 :: 3 producers .........................................: 87 : :: 4 producers .........................................: 28 COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: 5 or more producers .................................: 9 AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: : : :: Farms reporting- : CCC loans ............................................farms: 4 :: Internet access .........................................: 2,545 $1,000: 851 :: Dial-up ...............................................: 46 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : :: Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ........: 1,334 Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : :: Cellular data plan (see text) .........................: 1,825 Enhancement Program payments ........................farms: 141 :: Satellite .............................................: 663 $1,000: 1,712 :: Don't know ............................................: 74 Other Federal farm program payments ..................farms: 425 :: Other .................................................: 34 $1,000: 18,241 :: : : :: Farms by number of households sharing : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: in net income of operation: : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: 1 household .............................................: 2,055 : :: 2 households ............................................: 486 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..........................: 281 :: 3 households ............................................: 183 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ........................: 160 :: 4 households ............................................: 62 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .........................: 31 :: 5 or more households ....................................: 40 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 68. Young Producers - Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 :: Characteristics : 2022 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ...........................................number: 3,859 :: Years operating any farm: : : :: 5 years or less .........................................: 1,907 Sex of producers: : :: 6 to 10 years ...........................................: 1,316 Male ....................................................: 2,323 :: 11 years or more ........................................: 636 Female ..................................................: 1,536 :: : : :: Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..........: 172 Hired managers ............................................: 593 :: : : :: Producers by race: : Primary occupation: : :: American Indian or Alaska Native ........................: 38 Farming .................................................: 1,679 :: Asian ...................................................: 30 Other ...................................................: 2,180 :: Black or African American ...............................: 8 : :: Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...............: 4 Place of residence: : :: White ...................................................: 3,758 On farm operated ........................................: 2,643 :: More than one race reported .............................: 21 Not on farm operated ....................................: 1,216 :: : : :: Military service: : Days of work off farm: : :: Never served or only on active duty for training in : None ....................................................: 904 :: the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..............: 3,786 Any .....................................................: 2,955 :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...............: 73 1 to 49 days ..........................................: 488 :: : 50 to 99 days .........................................: 205 :: Number of persons living in producers' households .........: 7,184 100 to 199 days .......................................: 391 :: : 200 days or more ......................................: 1,871 :: On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : : :: Day-to-day decisions ....................................: 3,130 Years on present farm: : :: Land use and/or crop decisions ..........................: 2,743 2 years or less .........................................: 690 :: Livestock decisions .....................................: 2,385 3 or 4 years ............................................: 1,056 :: Marketing decisions (see text) ..........................: 2,242 5 to 9 years ............................................: 1,487 :: Record keeping and/or financial management ..............: 2,336 10 years or more ........................................: 626 :: Estate planning or succession planning ..................: 1,439 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 69. Selected Farm Characteristics - Farms with New and Beginning Producers: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : :: FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : : :: CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : Farms ...............................................number: 8,702 8,123 :: : Land in farms ........................................acres: 2,736,291 2,810,463 :: Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) ...: 288 160 : :: Other crop farming (1119) .................................: 2,585 2,172 FARMS BY SIZE : :: Tobacco farming (11191) .................................: - - : :: Cotton farming (11192) ..................................: - - 1 to 9 acres ..............................................: 2,763 2,813 :: Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all : 10 to 49 acres ............................................: 2,810 2,552 :: other crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ...............: 2,585 2,172 50 to 179 acres ...........................................: 1,403 1,127 :: Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .................: 2,561 2,870 180 to 499 acres ..........................................: 718 669 :: Cattle feedlots (112112) ..................................: 24 37 500 acres or more .........................................: 1,008 962 :: Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ..................: 95 142 : :: Hog and pig farming (1122) ................................: 114 151 OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : :: Poultry and egg production (1123) .........................: 376 114 : :: Sheep and goat farming (1124) .............................: 518 510 Owned land in farms ..................................farms: 8,046 7,298 :: Aquaculture and other : acres: 1,677,681 1,606,277 :: animal production (1125, 1129) ...........................: 1,096 993 Rented or leased land in farms .......................farms: 2,090 2,138 :: : acres: 1,058,610 1,204,186 :: OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : :: : TENURE : :: Farms by- : : :: : Full owners ..........................................farms: 6,612 5,985 :: Type of organization: : acres: 1,130,165 975,229 :: Operation more than 50 percent owned : Part owners ..........................................farms: 1,434 1,313 :: by one producer's household and/or : acres: 1,216,454 1,316,093 :: extended family ......................................: 8,200 7,716 Tenants ..............................................farms: 656 825 :: Limited Liability Company .............................: 1,647 1,166 acres: 389,672 519,141 :: : : :: Operation's legal status for tax purposes: : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : :: Family or individual ..................................: 7,000 6,718 SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : :: Partnership ...........................................: 690 608 : :: Corporation ...........................................: 763 573 Total ................................................farms: 8,702 8,123 :: Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : $1,000: 2,506,314 2,216,052 :: association, American Indian Reservation, etc. .......: 249 224 : :: : Market value of agricultural products sold .........farms: 8,702 8,123 :: Number of producers: : $1,000: 2,473,349 2,187,454 :: 1 producer ............................................: 1,730 1,944 Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ....farms: 3,545 3,594 :: 2 producers ...........................................: 5,147 4,779 $1,000: 1,136,190 996,448 :: 3 producers ...........................................: 911 778 Livestock, poultry, and their products ...........farms: 4,101 4,210 :: 4 producers ...........................................: 566 440 $1,000: 1,337,159 1,191,006 :: 5 or more producers ...................................: 348 182 Government payments ................................farms: 1,370 1,300 :: : $1,000: 32,965 28,598 :: Number of male producers: : : :: 1 producer ..........................................: 6,184 6,074 FARMS BY ECONOMIC CLASS : :: 2 producers .........................................: 1,298 1,099 : :: 3 producers .........................................: 490 238 Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 2,187 2,480 :: 4 producers .........................................: 94 119 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 1,337 1,195 :: 5 or more producers .................................: 97 41 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 1,070 951 :: : $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 1,072 844 :: Number of female producers: : $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 818 735 :: 1 producer ..........................................: 5,878 5,411 $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 577 453 :: 2 producers .........................................: 693 589 $50,000 or more ...........................................: 1,641 1,465 :: 3 producers .........................................: 114 83 : :: 4 producers .........................................: 63 21 COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (CCC) LOANS : :: 5 or more producers .................................: 27 13 AND FEDERAL FARM PROGRAM PAYMENTS : :: : : :: Farms reporting- : CCC loans ............................................farms: 10 33 :: Internet access .........................................: 7,535 7,056 $1,000: 929 2,954 :: Dial-up ...............................................: 140 149 Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, : :: Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ........: 3,937 (NA) Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : :: Cellular data plan (see text) .........................: 4,966 2,666 Enhancement Program payments ........................farms: 632 392 :: Satellite .............................................: 2,149 1,783 $1,000: 7,226 6,659 :: Don't know ............................................: 254 572 Other Federal farm program payments ..................farms: 851 1,168 :: Other .................................................: 154 419 $1,000: 25,739 21,938 :: : : :: Farms by number of households sharing : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : :: in net income of operation: : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : :: 1 household .............................................: 7,117 6,706 : :: 2 households ............................................: 1,081 984 Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..........................: 583 500 :: 3 households ............................................: 288 248 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ........................: 289 303 :: 4 households ............................................: 119 109 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .........................: 173 171 :: 5 or more households ....................................: 97 76 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 70. New and Beginning Producers - Selected Producer Characteristics: 2022 and 2017 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 :: Characteristics : 2022 : 2017 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers ...........................................number: 14,798 13,033 :: Age group: - Con. : : :: : Sex of producers: : :: 55 to 64 years ..........................................: 2,470 2,358 Male ....................................................: 8,374 7,331 :: 65 to 74 years ..........................................: 1,704 1,169 Female ..................................................: 6,424 5,702 :: 75 years and over .......................................: 429 260 : :: : Hired managers ............................................: 897 802 :: Average age .............................................: 46.6 45.7 : :: : Primary occupation: : :: Young producers (see text) ................................: 3,223 (NA) Farming .................................................: 4,248 3,626 :: : Other ...................................................: 10,550 9,407 :: Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..........: 560 357 : :: : Place of residence: : :: Producers by race: : On farm operated ........................................: 10,667 9,816 :: American Indian or Alaska Native ........................: 107 75 Not on farm operated ....................................: 4,131 3,217 :: Asian ...................................................: 67 37 : :: Black or African American ...............................: 11 - Days of work off farm: : :: Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...............: 22 14 None ....................................................: 3,519 3,050 :: White ...................................................: 14,433 12,797 Any .....................................................: 11,279 9,983 :: More than one race reported .............................: 133 106 1 to 49 days ..........................................: 1,606 1,379 :: : 50 to 99 days .........................................: 757 700 :: Military service: : 100 to 199 days .......................................: 1,319 1,279 :: Never served or only on active duty for training in : 200 days or more ......................................: 7,597 6,625 :: the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..............: 13,710 11,887 : :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...............: 1,088 1,146 Years operating any farm: : :: : 5 years or less .........................................: 7,099 (NA) :: Number of persons living in producers' households .........: 31,094 28,321 6 to 10 years ...........................................: 7,699 (NA) :: : 11 years or more ........................................: (X) (X) :: On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : : :: Day-to-day decisions ....................................: 12,407 11,070 Age group: : :: Land use and/or crop decisions ..........................: 10,662 9,854 Under 25 years ..........................................: 832 613 :: Livestock decisions .....................................: 9,150 8,415 25 to 34 years ..........................................: 2,391 2,566 :: Marketing decisions (see text) ..........................: 7,864 (NA) 35 to 44 years ..........................................: 4,134 3,427 :: Record keeping and/or financial management ..............: 9,880 9,172 45 to 54 years ..........................................: 2,838 2,640 :: Estate planning or succession planning ..................: 6,829 6,031 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 percent: 100.0 25.3 30.5 3.9 5.0 4.2 Land in farms ............................................acres: 11,547,963 27,849 152,698 50,791 91,750 111,409 Average size of farm .................................acres: 505 5 22 58 81 116 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 $1,000: 11,024,607 82,247 386,291 90,821 112,013 311,687 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 481,908 14,217 55,366 103,089 98,864 324,674 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 5,317 1,910 2,136 172 170 207 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 2,873 1,339 1,141 114 102 38 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 2,357 912 968 86 145 100 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 2,526 871 1,016 97 124 105 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 2,368 426 947 174 152 109 : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,551 166 418 118 145 110 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,228 60 198 81 155 129 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 1,415 44 80 22 96 108 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 1,102 19 28 8 19 21 : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 778 18 10 3 15 13 $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 1,362 20 35 6 10 20 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 639 19 13 2 5 3 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 373 1 10 - 1 8 $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 350 - 12 4 4 9 : Total sales ............................................farms: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 $1,000: 10,892,201 80,589 383,500 90,338 110,822 309,894 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 3,530 86 254 67 161 141 $1,000: 1,626,831 233 4,648 1,899 6,179 7,516 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,497 - 15 12 51 63 $1,000: 1,607,176 - 948 817 3,890 5,846 Corn ...............................................farms: 1,117 50 84 21 54 41 $1,000: 405,868 162 2,259 731 2,710 2,420 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 788 - 7 4 24 22 $1,000: 398,382 - 485 308 2,068 2,003 Wheat ..............................................farms: 2,203 14 121 34 89 69 $1,000: 744,115 36 1,647 686 2,279 3,215 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1,538 - 6 4 10 25 $1,000: 730,200 - 324 233 594 2,333 Soybeans ...........................................farms: 8 - 2 - - - $1,000: 135 - (D) - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: 6 - - - - - $1,000: 337 - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 - - - - - $1,000: (D) - - - - - Barley .............................................farms: 1,319 19 44 15 52 46 $1,000: 349,414 33 490 276 969 1,336 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 838 - - - 2 9 $1,000: 341,143 - - - (D) (D) Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 771 3 24 6 19 18 $1,000: 126,961 2 (D) 206 221 545 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 479 - - 1 - 5 $1,000: 121,065 - - (D) - 315 Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 1,231 322 159 14 51 34 $1,000: 1,597,035 2,611 6,882 1,059 5,406 5,745 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 679 4 31 6 25 18 $1,000: 1,591,765 234 5,468 1,002 5,115 5,582 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 561 295 177 13 27 16 $1,000: 31,693 2,005 2,746 168 1,124 1,288 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 38 5 14 - 5 6 $1,000: 27,916 338 1,184 - 967 1,210 Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 446 222 150 13 25 10 $1,000: 29,683 1,245 2,284 129 1,058 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 29 2 10 - 5 5 $1,000: 26,766 (D) 892 - 962 663 Berries ............................................farms: 234 129 65 6 12 12 $1,000: 2,010 760 462 39 67 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 7 3 2 - - 1 $1,000: 943 213 (D) - - (D) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 599 324 165 16 30 13 $1,000: 122,254 20,576 13,305 (D) 11,100 6,576 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 183 58 45 11 23 5 $1,000: 117,897 17,873 12,052 1,884 11,017 6,502 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 percent: 4.1 2.3 1.9 6.8 6.0 4.6 5.5 Land in farms ............................................acres: 146,182 102,688 103,105 567,714 969,169 1,441,051 7,783,557 Average size of farm .................................acres: 158 199 239 363 700 1,375 6,143 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 $1,000: 266,988 181,468 138,830 896,909 1,446,866 1,570,353 5,540,131 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 288,013 351,001 321,367 572,739 1,045,423 1,498,428 4,372,637 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 194 94 64 171 97 51 51 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 50 12 16 30 27 3 1 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 45 20 19 41 12 8 1 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 93 60 26 83 28 18 5 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 101 61 40 197 104 50 7 : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 89 54 61 160 165 39 26 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 122 50 46 149 114 81 43 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 148 99 66 235 210 165 142 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 52 37 74 309 224 152 159 : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 17 23 9 110 207 182 171 $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 16 7 11 81 196 299 661 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 4 2 7 23 138 193 230 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 4 2 - 27 26 65 229 $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 8 3 4 31 32 41 202 : Total sales ............................................farms: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 $1,000: 265,128 179,530 137,381 885,822 1,431,889 1,549,870 5,467,439 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 174 102 119 509 615 541 761 $1,000: 12,681 8,321 14,229 80,060 163,905 263,026 1,064,132 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 102 62 85 404 515 480 708 $1,000: 10,880 7,492 13,426 77,629 161,709 261,620 1,062,919 Corn ...............................................farms: 42 39 57 179 184 150 216 $1,000: 3,188 2,835 6,420 27,288 53,013 74,360 230,481 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 20 12 44 144 171 136 204 $1,000: 2,573 1,904 6,143 26,303 52,538 73,945 230,110 Wheat ..............................................farms: 112 61 71 300 374 378 580 $1,000: 5,982 2,921 4,284 28,627 59,573 122,005 512,860 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 42 26 34 210 290 346 545 $1,000: 4,114 2,185 3,321 26,278 57,552 121,157 512,109 Soybeans ...........................................farms: - - 4 1 1 - - $1,000: - - (D) (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: - - 4 - 1 - 1 $1,000: - - (D) - (D) - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - 1 - 1 $1,000: - - - - (D) - (D) Barley .............................................farms: 60 38 37 181 237 199 391 $1,000: 2,628 2,224 2,373 17,607 40,162 43,213 238,101 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 26 15 19 122 170 151 324 $1,000: 2,127 1,818 2,096 16,586 38,922 42,240 236,632 Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 19 11 25 92 146 149 259 $1,000: 883 341 (D) (D) (D) 23,447 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 6 3 8 45 86 111 214 $1,000: 535 169 (D) 5,363 9,605 22,777 81,538 Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 44 25 15 112 112 136 207 $1,000: 11,065 12,000 4,092 43,405 84,926 183,856 1,235,986 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 39 21 14 84 110 121 206 $1,000: 10,976 11,869 (D) 42,876 (D) 183,688 (D) : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 3 5 3 3 6 8 5 $1,000: (D) 87 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 3 4 3 3 2 6 5 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1 - 1 2 1 1 1 $1,000: (D) - (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Berries ............................................farms: - 2 1 1 4 2 - $1,000: - (D) (D) (D) 23 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - 1 - - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 12 2 9 9 11 6 2 $1,000: 14,079 (D) 7,063 22,893 13,770 9,567 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 10 1 5 8 10 6 1 $1,000: (D) (D) 7,050 (D) (D) 9,567 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 47 13 17 3 6 4 $1,000: 673 23 (D) 5 7 23 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 - 1 - - - $1,000: (D) - (D) - - - Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 47 13 17 3 6 4 $1,000: 673 23 (D) 5 7 23 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 - 1 - - - $1,000: (D) - (D) - - - Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 7,813 963 2,323 322 449 368 $1,000: 1,386,308 2,042 16,689 6,111 11,561 14,129 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,501 - 37 33 77 102 $1,000: 1,335,712 - 2,279 2,403 6,227 10,520 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 7,630 1,634 1,973 307 353 330 $1,000: 2,175,548 14,643 62,845 46,726 31,197 66,411 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,047 34 95 36 68 75 $1,000: 2,114,032 6,083 47,663 43,496 27,014 61,886 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 330 26 32 7 10 25 $1,000: 3,727,378 11,991 153,838 31,217 38,605 198,500 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 295 13 22 3 9 25 $1,000: 3,727,100 11,973 153,763 31,183 (D) 198,500 Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 663 290 250 14 24 18 $1,000: 23,779 2,018 (D) 22 156 39 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 18 1 7 - - - $1,000: 22,239 (D) (D) - - - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 1,454 655 488 54 56 32 $1,000: 46,709 2,246 2,322 357 1,588 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 50 2 3 - 4 4 $1,000: 40,891 (D) 451 - 1,206 (D) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 1,028 282 394 51 40 33 $1,000: 12,951 2,292 5,091 624 374 440 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 54 7 26 3 1 1 $1,000: 4,770 440 1,986 166 (D) (D) Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 1,751 850 642 38 62 34 $1,000: 40,298 3,821 (D) 51 116 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 15 2 5 - - 1 $1,000: 37,584 (D) (D) - - (D) Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 51 13 19 2 4 4 $1,000: 76,464 6,342 60,306 (D) 3,057 1,237 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 39 8 16 - 3 4 $1,000: 76,279 (D) (D) - (D) 1,237 Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 585 224 207 19 23 21 $1,000: 24,281 9,745 5,031 96 351 2,064 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 65 28 14 - 2 4 $1,000: 22,371 9,085 4,573 - (D) 2,009 : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 4,296 99 421 132 245 222 $1,000: 132,405 1,659 2,791 484 1,191 1,794 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 719 11 38 11 10 23 $1,000: 99,099 133 203 63 243 484 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 1,499 694 468 51 62 32 $1,000: 20,984 2,752 7,192 511 1,048 129 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 638 192 181 32 41 19 $1,000: 57,669 1,810 4,903 830 3,483 1,355 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 $1,000: 9,317,904 122,774 392,456 87,863 101,484 260,003 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 407,304 21,223 56,250 99,731 89,571 270,836 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 9,896 1,889 2,482 328 472 407 $1,000: 765,559 1,323 4,478 1,175 2,666 4,025 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 5,657 1,858 2,301 247 289 195 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,673 27 172 79 173 164 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 636 - 5 2 10 37 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,930 4 4 - - 11 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 10,419 1,985 2,668 338 498 408 $1,000: 410,258 718 2,223 524 1,218 1,493 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,344 1,973 2,592 299 436 332 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 1 1 - 1 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) - (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - 1 - - - $1,000: - - - (D) - - - Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 1 1 - 1 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) - (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - 1 - - - $1,000: - - - (D) - - - Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 313 237 209 729 698 547 655 $1,000: 19,313 15,791 19,436 115,512 188,036 260,642 717,045 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 139 105 111 439 471 428 559 $1,000: 16,361 13,801 17,554 110,132 183,479 258,174 714,782 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 289 199 163 635 578 541 628 $1,000: 133,402 17,338 47,873 344,177 480,673 368,147 562,116 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 87 60 42 273 344 357 576 $1,000: 130,100 14,808 45,559 336,786 475,628 364,217 560,791 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 19 11 7 50 54 38 51 $1,000: 68,596 120,949 41,804 273,695 490,928 452,029 1,845,227 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 15 10 6 50 54 37 51 $1,000: 68,519 (D) (D) 273,695 490,928 (D) 1,845,227 Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 11 8 5 15 16 9 3 $1,000: 41 (D) 7 910 22 234 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - 1 - 4 - 3 2 $1,000: - (D) - 828 - 184 (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 30 7 18 26 26 20 42 $1,000: 412 (D) 753 800 (D) 10,328 19,156 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 1 1 1 1 2 6 25 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 10,248 19,028 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 31 34 5 42 39 19 58 $1,000: 249 681 34 378 602 1,049 1,137 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 1 4 - - 4 4 3 $1,000: (D) 420 - - 214 800 500 Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 32 20 12 24 13 19 5 $1,000: 2,600 40 25 33 (D) (D) 10 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 3 - - - 1 3 - $1,000: 2,532 - - - (D) 170 - Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 2 1 1 1 3 - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) 1,174 - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 1 1 - 3 - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - 1,174 - (D) Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 14 10 6 15 24 6 16 $1,000: 529 (D) (D) 1,055 521 346 2,720 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 2 2 3 1 2 5 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 937 (D) (D) 2,640 : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 257 141 133 604 679 556 807 $1,000: 1,860 1,937 1,450 11,087 14,977 20,483 72,692 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 21 10 23 107 95 145 225 $1,000: 432 280 1,129 6,428 7,099 26,200 56,405 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 36 17 18 43 24 32 22 $1,000: 1,105 210 113 1,033 1,059 1,375 4,458 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 17 15 11 33 43 34 20 $1,000: 4,150 1,104 188 3,155 12,878 8,523 15,291 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 $1,000: 225,641 142,334 119,818 706,922 1,187,097 1,367,377 4,604,135 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 243,410 275,308 277,357 451,419 857,729 1,304,749 3,633,887 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 397 251 219 872 885 734 960 $1,000: 7,868 3,734 5,323 34,933 65,650 114,847 519,538 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 140 90 64 179 128 94 72 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 179 98 80 260 214 112 115 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 46 56 39 190 126 61 64 $50,000 or more .........................................: 32 7 36 243 417 467 709 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 471 258 224 914 916 757 982 $1,000: 2,611 2,414 1,854 13,600 29,758 53,198 300,648 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 324 170 132 412 314 180 180 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,444 11 74 39 58 66 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 523 - 1 - 4 8 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,108 1 1 - - 2 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 7,732 1,333 1,632 219 355 317 $1,000: 378,944 3,933 4,434 1,120 2,146 3,042 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 2,522 931 991 101 117 98 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,881 305 499 92 160 142 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,602 72 118 22 61 63 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 515 11 19 2 5 12 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,212 14 5 2 12 2 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 1,065 166 273 36 46 38 $1,000: 4,094 36 168 38 54 59 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 6,503 2,081 1,929 246 236 227 $1,000: 722,700 10,833 18,217 14,730 11,407 19,539 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 4,196 1,751 1,504 164 150 128 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,502 290 357 63 64 77 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 476 27 49 13 12 12 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 140 3 10 1 5 4 $250,000 or more ........................................: 189 10 9 5 5 6 : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 3,243 698 780 150 131 138 $1,000: 121,882 6,024 11,612 1,019 1,718 5,781 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 4,301 1,680 1,450 147 135 131 $1,000: 600,818 4,809 6,605 13,711 9,689 13,758 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 13,525 4,320 4,304 495 530 465 $1,000: 2,598,813 27,659 166,072 34,578 38,787 129,971 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 8,387 3,405 2,944 300 323 248 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,621 825 1,198 163 153 147 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 912 60 111 23 40 43 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 207 15 24 4 4 6 $250,000 or more ........................................: 398 15 27 5 10 21 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 21,557 5,340 6,618 826 1,058 878 $1,000: 395,457 8,365 17,379 2,938 4,555 8,677 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 15,681 4,991 6,021 697 846 619 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,613 308 545 124 192 214 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 862 31 30 3 8 21 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,401 10 22 2 12 24 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 15,852 3,608 4,420 546 766 644 $1,000: 357,174 6,209 15,090 1,931 3,210 6,869 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 4,788 1,871 1,811 148 185 154 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 6,414 1,508 2,201 309 382 297 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,982 217 371 83 193 169 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 605 8 13 4 2 9 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,063 4 24 2 4 15 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 18,678 4,308 5,489 707 935 791 $1,000: 632,154 11,968 29,549 5,473 6,961 17,027 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 11,397 3,728 4,396 511 557 456 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 4,430 530 1,006 166 337 283 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,046 31 54 25 32 30 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,805 19 33 5 9 22 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 5,697 694 910 158 243 207 $1,000: 1,043,118 16,874 45,939 8,850 11,990 22,508 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,583 405 486 74 85 78 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,302 170 240 55 86 54 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,427 81 122 19 41 49 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 639 23 32 6 22 5 $250,000 or more ........................................: 746 15 30 4 9 21 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 2,547 393 505 76 148 110 $1,000: 101,956 1,826 5,728 720 1,301 4,174 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 452 158 153 17 37 20 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 752 151 240 34 47 34 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 753 68 87 18 50 38 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 256 11 15 5 9 5 $50,000 or more .........................................: 334 5 10 2 5 13 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 5,857 839 1,458 214 269 257 $1,000: 247,148 1,662 10,672 4,064 2,960 8,349 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 1,290 480 529 43 45 31 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,893 320 720 113 108 91 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,497 27 183 50 101 103 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 401 8 10 3 10 13 $50,000 or more .........................................: 776 4 16 5 5 19 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 118 77 78 365 251 175 132 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 22 2 6 88 170 123 99 $50,000 or more .........................................: 7 9 8 49 181 279 571 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 301 177 187 773 825 705 908 $1,000: 3,085 1,664 1,990 20,267 29,592 54,758 252,912 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 57 20 24 56 82 29 16 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 105 65 60 178 104 99 72 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 110 78 82 379 302 162 153 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 19 7 20 99 133 98 90 $50,000 or more .........................................: 10 7 1 61 204 317 577 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 50 31 19 99 96 101 110 $1,000: 456 42 27 244 400 1,024 1,549 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 159 113 71 341 327 330 443 $1,000: 67,573 (D) (D) 108,882 170,840 124,297 146,294 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 72 61 38 136 82 60 50 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 53 33 22 118 152 144 129 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 21 12 5 49 57 81 138 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 7 2 2 10 10 30 56 $250,000 or more ........................................: 6 5 4 28 26 15 70 : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 94 86 52 222 251 270 371 $1,000: (D) 7,385 (D) 7,464 (D) 15,202 41,976 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 85 41 31 170 123 145 163 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 101,417 (D) 109,095 104,317 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 404 271 198 711 617 555 655 $1,000: 63,115 75,841 41,542 224,452 421,125 368,112 1,007,560 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 188 146 96 304 201 142 90 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 154 80 72 242 235 192 160 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 41 31 17 93 95 151 207 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 6 6 6 12 26 21 77 $250,000 or more ........................................: 15 8 7 60 60 49 121 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 836 486 419 1,495 1,325 1,026 1,250 $1,000: 6,416 5,919 4,613 27,681 44,625 56,996 207,294 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 566 304 242 667 386 216 126 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 240 154 148 587 528 301 272 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 13 21 18 128 196 189 204 $50,000 or more .........................................: 17 7 11 113 215 320 648 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 589 367 351 1,217 1,173 953 1,218 $1,000: 5,302 2,625 3,849 20,180 35,487 50,938 205,484 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 110 86 48 140 133 59 43 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 241 159 132 393 341 256 195 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 212 104 148 475 365 262 383 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 14 12 18 133 164 102 126 $50,000 or more .........................................: 12 6 5 76 170 274 471 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 738 429 389 1,375 1,270 997 1,250 $1,000: 12,354 7,604 7,172 48,405 61,879 95,514 328,249 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 397 204 150 440 303 154 101 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 257 161 158 563 419 276 274 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 53 55 62 189 208 155 152 $50,000 or more .........................................: 31 9 19 183 340 412 723 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 230 138 139 631 688 671 988 $1,000: 21,324 11,178 14,065 74,774 117,119 161,254 537,243 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 62 47 33 131 85 65 32 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 97 42 25 197 127 107 102 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 47 36 70 192 276 217 277 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 6 7 4 51 107 150 226 $250,000 or more ........................................: 18 6 7 60 93 132 351 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 81 53 40 255 237 259 390 $1,000: 1,464 (D) (D) 6,895 10,406 16,376 51,878 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 19 5 7 10 9 13 4 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 36 15 14 60 38 42 41 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 11 23 15 120 90 94 139 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 8 9 1 39 47 35 72 $50,000 or more .........................................: 7 1 3 26 53 75 134 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 251 140 131 578 565 490 665 $1,000: 5,878 2,712 2,226 20,949 33,474 40,354 113,846 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 24 12 8 52 24 15 27 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 82 56 55 121 98 77 52 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 113 54 44 250 234 164 174 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 18 10 17 69 77 86 80 $50,000 or more .........................................: 14 8 7 86 132 148 332 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 5,471 368 790 171 257 270 $1,000: 550,451 1,543 5,424 2,082 2,790 3,270 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,036 312 603 114 145 118 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 590 26 93 24 33 55 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 871 14 66 22 50 64 $25,000 or more .........................................: 1,974 16 28 11 29 33 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 1,821 273 319 53 67 69 $1,000: 80,056 718 3,460 228 865 1,336 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 408 150 131 12 6 17 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 436 84 125 34 33 27 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 516 37 55 6 27 21 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 151 - - - - - $50,000 or more .........................................: 310 2 8 1 1 4 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 6,805 1,094 1,531 215 261 273 $1,000: 286,045 6,956 14,017 2,364 2,428 5,409 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,537 581 777 110 140 140 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,688 481 680 92 101 96 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,113 32 66 10 18 29 $100,000 or more ........................................: 467 - 8 3 2 8 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 4,788 814 1,138 158 168 183 $1,000: 188,811 5,371 10,105 1,442 1,814 2,076 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 429 112 132 30 28 15 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,138 261 362 46 46 74 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 2,184 421 593 75 80 74 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 452 20 27 2 12 11 $50,000 or more .......................................: 585 - 24 5 2 9 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 4,230 604 839 112 169 184 $1,000: 97,234 1,585 3,913 921 614 3,333 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 780 154 251 20 59 42 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,752 392 469 71 85 94 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 1,098 51 110 16 21 34 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 288 7 7 2 2 9 $50,000 or more .......................................: 312 - 2 3 2 5 : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 21,486 5,398 6,664 824 1,078 896 $1,000: 128,588 11,812 15,426 2,285 3,379 2,878 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 17,581 5,122 6,265 740 921 756 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,036 203 295 46 108 102 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,125 50 83 31 38 31 $25,000 or more .........................................: 744 23 21 7 11 7 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 9,388 2,445 2,847 355 395 356 $1,000: 172,113 2,643 11,087 1,410 1,341 8,277 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,856 2,363 2,688 327 341 306 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,128 75 135 24 51 34 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 143 7 4 1 - 2 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 91 - 10 - 1 3 $100,000 or more ........................................: 170 - 10 3 2 11 : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 12,433 2,089 2,979 434 634 559 $1,000: 447,370 7,732 23,260 3,392 3,480 13,161 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,586 1,841 2,572 341 460 396 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,987 206 360 75 157 135 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 634 23 16 7 8 6 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 642 8 7 9 6 11 $100,000 or more ........................................: 584 11 24 2 3 11 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 867 39 109 22 30 17 $1,000: 36,781 90 381 76 288 146 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 15,202 3,149 4,169 593 762 664 $1,000: 892,639 18,068 44,485 9,221 13,003 22,794 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 $1,000: 2,034,090 -26,831 17,951 8,131 18,178 62,018 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 88,914 -4,638 2,573 9,229 16,044 64,603 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 8,958 1,038 1,794 361 545 449 Average net gain .................................dollars: 275,011 28,297 54,344 53,214 55,369 165,475 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 625 219 259 21 30 23 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,519 372 582 89 100 91 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 841 152 275 61 61 37 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,326 129 317 103 114 103 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,020 77 186 44 102 61 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,627 89 175 43 138 134 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 268 188 156 671 710 655 967 $1,000: 4,018 5,521 4,014 21,961 47,434 84,765 367,629 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 110 79 48 205 141 96 65 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 47 26 17 72 83 57 57 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 61 45 50 130 140 80 149 $25,000 or more .........................................: 50 38 41 264 346 422 696 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 61 28 49 178 169 204 351 $1,000: 646 1,285 651 4,453 6,220 9,345 50,849 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 14 9 11 23 14 8 13 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 18 2 11 35 19 24 24 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 17 14 21 75 73 76 94 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 12 2 4 21 23 37 52 $50,000 or more .........................................: - 1 2 24 40 59 168 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 259 178 167 709 675 598 845 $1,000: 7,358 3,328 2,963 20,424 28,806 29,663 162,330 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 105 79 57 216 159 100 73 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 109 72 71 304 275 212 195 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 39 24 36 145 179 211 324 $100,000 or more ........................................: 6 3 3 44 62 75 253 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 178 101 112 502 463 410 561 $1,000: 2,722 1,322 1,969 13,100 17,054 18,420 113,416 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 17 8 6 25 20 22 14 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 41 25 20 125 75 37 26 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 88 60 58 223 198 176 138 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 22 6 19 62 83 80 108 $50,000 or more .......................................: 10 2 9 67 87 95 275 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 162 118 98 471 465 410 598 $1,000: 4,636 2,006 993 7,324 11,752 11,243 48,914 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 39 25 11 67 68 18 26 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 64 47 50 171 141 91 77 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 43 40 29 180 173 199 202 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 10 4 6 25 46 44 126 $50,000 or more .......................................: 6 2 2 28 37 58 167 : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 882 463 400 1,442 1,288 981 1,170 $1,000: 2,820 1,996 1,703 8,228 13,268 18,869 45,927 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 732 364 295 972 722 413 279 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 115 77 77 316 281 200 216 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 28 12 24 113 193 222 300 $25,000 or more .........................................: 7 10 4 41 92 146 375 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 322 221 163 583 559 509 633 $1,000: 3,184 4,112 2,083 17,757 20,485 20,503 79,232 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 276 187 140 411 337 281 199 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 34 26 18 121 166 174 270 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 2 3 1 8 9 21 85 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 4 2 - 17 23 8 23 $100,000 or more ........................................: 6 3 4 26 24 25 56 : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 554 338 338 1,169 1,175 941 1,223 $1,000: 10,625 3,514 3,383 33,081 50,929 67,590 227,223 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 339 213 191 462 371 241 159 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 172 104 130 508 477 321 342 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 15 17 5 76 163 166 132 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 16 2 8 84 95 120 276 $100,000 or more ........................................: 12 2 4 39 69 93 314 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 21 14 34 109 104 138 230 $1,000: 294 154 930 2,083 4,116 9,316 18,905 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 605 368 328 1,237 1,163 946 1,218 $1,000: 16,475 15,947 11,655 70,569 107,996 119,835 442,591 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 $1,000: 52,133 44,640 24,169 225,281 299,595 248,222 1,060,604 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 56,238 86,344 55,947 143,857 216,470 236,853 837,099 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 498 287 257 1,005 962 753 1,009 Average net gain .................................dollars: 124,682 177,276 130,721 258,688 354,724 409,152 1,146,798 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 22 14 6 19 4 7 1 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 74 35 28 67 49 22 10 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 47 28 20 62 44 31 23 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 88 61 32 166 123 51 39 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 81 47 46 128 116 76 56 $50,000 or more .........................................: 186 102 125 563 626 566 880 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : : Farms with net losses .................................number: 13,919 4,747 5,183 520 588 511 Average net loss .................................dollars: 30,854 11,840 15,347 21,307 20,406 24,031 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 848 322 325 21 55 32 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,810 1,640 1,475 132 142 129 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,928 1,184 1,157 118 104 96 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,582 1,106 1,492 138 155 140 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,445 366 505 67 87 69 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,306 129 229 44 45 45 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 $1,000: 1,897,116 -26,918 17,792 8,144 18,223 59,237 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 82,927 -4,653 2,550 9,244 16,084 61,706 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 8,919 1,036 1,793 360 544 449 Average net gain .................................dollars: 263,468 28,316 54,293 53,376 55,691 160,841 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 636 219 259 21 30 23 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,511 368 582 85 101 93 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 846 155 276 63 61 36 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,342 128 318 104 114 103 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 994 77 182 44 99 62 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,590 89 176 43 139 132 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 13,958 4,749 5,184 521 589 511 Average net loss .................................dollars: 32,437 11,845 15,346 21,250 20,497 25,401 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 843 321 323 21 55 32 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,827 1,643 1,485 134 142 130 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,922 1,180 1,154 118 105 94 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,574 1,110 1,486 137 152 140 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,453 367 507 67 89 67 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,339 128 229 44 46 48 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 39 - 1 - - - $1,000: 5,255 - (D) - - - : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 7,733 901 1,655 328 444 417 $1,000: 327,387 13,696 24,116 5,172 7,649 10,334 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 1,707 170 315 80 92 81 $1,000: 65,446 1,085 2,599 806 1,657 1,211 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 3,629 478 868 176 224 198 $1,000: 116,760 3,678 8,186 3,000 4,643 6,130 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 426 40 119 25 19 28 $1,000: 10,515 75 610 322 292 538 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 200 23 68 4 17 5 $1,000: 16,909 705 1,546 (D) (D) (D) Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 2,432 85 205 52 109 142 $1,000: 27,917 202 566 174 320 415 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 966 44 80 18 20 37 $1,000: 51,896 449 416 215 363 491 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 129 11 20 4 7 2 $1,000: 982 79 25 (D) (D) (D) Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 870 154 231 24 41 35 $1,000: 36,961 7,424 10,167 517 349 1,511 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 15,823 2,640 4,665 664 913 758 acres: 5,623,516 9,359 74,438 26,517 50,716 59,477 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 13,037 2,224 3,804 494 696 571 acres: 4,370,363 7,367 52,525 16,297 32,736 38,167 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 7,454 2,224 3,804 363 340 216 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 1,154 - - 131 356 189 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 1,197 - - - - 166 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 1,342 - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 826 - - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: 519 - - - - - 2,000 acres or more .....................................: 545 - - - - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 1,737 307 457 66 97 84 acres: 214,761 879 3,378 1,205 2,441 2,779 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 983 62 294 54 47 37 acres: 59,462 107 2,178 1,045 827 1,380 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 3,822 347 919 188 273 226 acres: 660,805 748 13,792 6,804 12,298 14,440 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 1,696 117 270 54 87 56 acres: 318,125 258 2,565 1,166 2,414 2,711 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : : Farms with net losses .................................number: 429 230 175 561 422 295 258 Average net loss .................................dollars: 23,215 27,123 53,865 61,856 98,697 202,948 374,090 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 37 13 8 27 2 - 6 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 104 36 26 68 34 14 10 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 64 33 23 73 57 10 9 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 116 91 58 115 92 41 38 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 48 25 22 102 69 63 22 $50,000 or more .........................................: 60 32 38 176 168 167 173 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 $1,000: 52,080 44,514 22,581 194,222 261,491 230,470 1,015,281 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 56,181 86,101 52,270 124,024 188,938 219,914 801,326 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 498 286 262 998 955 741 997 Average net gain .................................dollars: 124,580 177,596 121,591 230,183 317,494 402,260 1,129,151 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 28 14 10 20 3 5 4 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 70 37 27 69 50 20 9 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 46 25 21 66 49 30 18 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 86 61 31 165 128 62 42 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 87 48 46 130 106 66 47 $50,000 or more .........................................: 181 101 127 548 619 558 877 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 429 231 170 568 429 307 270 Average net loss .................................dollars: 23,220 27,179 54,567 62,501 97,240 220,210 409,195 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 37 13 8 26 2 - 5 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 105 35 24 68 34 15 12 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 63 36 22 74 56 11 9 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 116 88 56 119 92 44 34 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 48 27 23 101 71 62 24 $50,000 or more .........................................: 60 32 37 180 174 175 186 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: - - - 5 6 5 22 $1,000: - - - (D) 48 162 4,967 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 386 250 205 899 821 644 783 $1,000: 10,785 5,507 5,157 35,293 39,826 45,246 124,607 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 64 38 44 267 188 163 205 $1,000: 911 404 1,211 11,052 12,210 11,155 21,144 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 207 139 82 385 335 231 306 $1,000: 5,177 3,724 1,752 13,880 13,217 14,803 38,571 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 28 5 15 62 42 22 21 $1,000: 561 53 1,216 1,966 2,822 1,204 856 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 2 1 1 24 26 11 18 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 1,233 3,602 252 9,286 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 110 79 78 373 410 364 425 $1,000: 205 456 706 1,758 2,514 5,611 14,990 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 25 24 20 100 132 184 282 $1,000: 207 420 190 1,746 3,156 9,335 34,907 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 5 2 5 21 23 11 18 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 147 199 73 395 Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 48 28 14 62 55 66 112 $1,000: 3,587 448 72 3,511 2,105 2,813 4,457 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 743 412 362 1,344 1,229 950 1,143 acres: 83,839 55,965 59,223 336,316 610,253 882,767 3,374,646 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 518 330 307 1,103 1,044 862 1,084 acres: 51,732 36,814 43,884 240,975 450,037 685,087 2,714,742 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 112 85 57 139 49 36 29 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 108 60 45 113 71 52 29 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 298 151 93 225 144 62 58 200 to 499 acres ........................................: - 34 112 626 296 149 125 500 to 999 acres ........................................: - - - - 484 215 127 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: - - - - - 348 171 2,000 acres or more .....................................: - - - - - - 545 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 74 57 40 165 118 96 176 acres: 4,334 5,164 2,902 10,196 14,687 34,227 132,569 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 62 27 20 85 103 116 76 acres: 2,234 837 1,560 7,749 11,044 12,952 17,549 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 255 131 75 425 376 247 360 acres: 22,023 11,268 8,736 62,382 108,263 101,199 298,852 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 89 47 36 175 205 232 328 acres: 3,516 1,882 2,141 15,014 26,222 49,302 210,934 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 3,406 222 1,136 180 319 248 acres: 479,705 534 11,406 4,254 12,953 13,002 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 1,561 109 470 67 119 112 acres: 250,428 276 4,156 1,128 3,894 4,060 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 2,265 130 778 136 237 167 acres: 229,277 258 7,250 3,126 9,059 8,942 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 12,204 3,255 3,753 481 502 477 acres: 5,012,618 11,711 46,510 15,264 19,963 31,419 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 13,192 3,264 4,470 515 668 489 acres: 432,124 6,245 20,344 4,756 8,118 7,511 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 14,191 4,122 4,185 471 600 507 acres: 3,167,499 14,904 61,368 17,423 32,847 38,103 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 10,389 2,106 2,984 379 520 412 acres: 2,904,105 6,708 39,644 12,459 25,284 28,513 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 6,620 2,423 2,214 221 246 224 acres: 263,394 8,196 21,724 4,964 7,563 9,590 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 1,681 7 196 81 148 105 acres: 423,658 38 4,006 3,495 8,615 7,752 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 2,599 46 173 40 90 78 acres: 2,933,445 182 3,677 1,581 5,090 6,830 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 227 26 25 12 4 6 $1,000: 166,224 (D) 1,698 677 678 2,522 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 $1,000: 48,610,483 2,311,428 3,506,520 610,134 923,786 895,263 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,124,863 399,555 502,583 692,547 815,345 932,566 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,209 82,999 22,964 12,013 10,069 8,036 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,300 865 409 22 3 - $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,091 433 494 44 106 11 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 1,951 634 875 93 96 89 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 5,883 2,000 2,510 230 294 263 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 5,555 1,484 1,978 346 393 291 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 2,930 333 555 110 177 239 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 2,186 25 140 24 48 53 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 969 11 14 9 9 8 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 1,012 - 2 3 7 6 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 22,877 5,785 6,977 881 1,133 960 $1,000: 4,930,153 263,573 427,512 89,549 110,652 114,909 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 1,609 787 503 45 65 56 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 1,735 695 646 67 76 40 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 2,733 1,042 1,045 114 114 93 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 5,105 1,577 1,960 212 289 219 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 4,134 924 1,576 202 212 221 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 3,057 543 826 129 236 156 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 2,429 203 384 90 126 146 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 2,075 14 37 22 15 29 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 18,416 4,288 5,514 715 862 771 number: 54,948 6,111 9,138 1,497 1,816 1,869 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 16,968 3,454 5,209 661 839 743 number: 42,226 4,512 8,023 1,243 1,760 1,749 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 7,400 2,206 2,620 249 344 277 number: 9,283 2,576 3,135 309 446 359 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 9,749 1,447 2,997 450 541 527 number: 14,421 1,630 3,754 605 783 779 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 6,684 262 910 233 350 366 number: 18,522 306 1,134 329 531 611 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 2,292 14 86 31 67 71 number: 3,237 14 89 34 72 80 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - - number: - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 2,307 108 507 99 108 134 number: 2,680 114 530 108 117 140 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 6,213 485 1,532 289 337 329 number: 7,569 496 1,699 320 395 393 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 215 103 92 323 248 146 174 acres: 15,842 8,010 9,279 51,426 73,457 67,996 211,546 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 83 51 42 165 126 95 122 acres: 4,689 2,958 3,071 22,331 29,050 33,921 140,894 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 171 70 60 191 162 79 84 acres: 11,153 5,052 6,208 29,095 44,407 34,075 70,652 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 466 297 245 784 668 547 729 acres: 38,944 32,757 28,474 146,832 242,417 424,566 3,973,761 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 483 269 234 838 702 541 719 acres: 7,557 5,956 6,129 33,140 43,042 65,722 223,604 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 464 290 254 938 834 668 858 acres: 50,455 36,551 39,723 218,750 354,563 505,366 1,797,446 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 400 252 233 851 789 645 818 acres: 42,201 29,404 34,094 192,209 325,112 464,697 1,703,780 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 175 129 98 302 240 177 171 acres: 8,254 7,147 5,629 26,541 29,451 40,669 93,666 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 148 77 45 238 248 157 231 acres: 13,688 7,912 5,618 42,934 87,029 63,266 179,305 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 122 77 65 338 453 437 680 acres: 14,855 12,110 10,193 80,054 196,677 410,130 2,192,066 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 5 1 5 19 37 36 51 $1,000: 758 (D) 700 9,574 8,853 24,637 115,656 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 $1,000: 886,615 617,852 673,443 3,483,988 4,745,539 6,664,100 23,291,816 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 956,435 1,195,071 1,558,896 2,224,769 3,428,857 6,358,874 18,383,438 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 6,065 6,017 6,532 6,137 4,897 4,624 2,992 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: - - - - 1 - - $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 3 - - - - - - $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 107 33 10 9 5 - - $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 208 89 83 165 40 - 1 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 271 171 93 316 181 31 - : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 265 150 128 422 381 139 31 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 64 66 102 562 472 401 229 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 5 5 13 65 245 287 298 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 4 3 3 27 59 190 708 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 927 517 432 1,566 1,384 1,048 1,267 $1,000: 123,466 77,849 82,261 434,379 604,317 742,503 1,859,183 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 36 34 19 30 20 14 - $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 51 30 22 59 38 5 6 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 87 36 25 66 61 35 15 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 221 86 81 225 130 63 42 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 155 123 86 266 187 101 81 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 203 97 71 299 216 147 134 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 134 87 88 370 321 251 229 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 40 24 40 251 411 432 760 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 705 429 372 1,335 1,223 984 1,218 number: 1,928 1,080 1,051 4,408 5,653 6,261 14,136 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 683 387 370 1,290 1,170 977 1,185 number: 1,692 932 1,026 3,938 4,528 4,636 8,187 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 250 121 100 365 307 254 307 number: 318 175 140 484 426 380 535 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 412 257 258 864 706 626 664 number: 644 383 436 1,393 1,226 1,268 1,520 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 369 207 221 927 951 825 1,063 number: 730 374 450 2,061 2,876 2,988 6,132 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 92 59 65 303 426 429 649 number: 116 63 77 364 549 605 1,174 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 125 58 73 228 298 246 323 number: 143 59 81 272 382 306 428 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 325 190 189 668 661 527 681 number: 404 237 243 838 846 685 1,013 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 8,673 1,390 2,050 282 430 366 acres treated: 3,496,612 4,887 30,293 9,539 20,319 26,914 Manure used ..............................................farms: 3,432 746 1,002 121 169 124 acres treated: 331,595 2,431 10,508 2,678 4,661 5,326 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 497 125 162 26 11 10 acres treated: 55,232 323 1,585 465 169 715 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 2,975 406 485 63 128 96 acres: 1,304,919 943 6,083 1,987 5,675 6,719 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 8,233 1,334 1,847 258 394 340 acres: 3,216,414 4,323 25,470 7,193 16,242 21,405 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 714 53 83 12 23 21 acres: 311,847 134 1,151 333 846 1,302 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 1,321 127 167 28 45 43 acres: 759,333 263 1,998 791 1,563 2,424 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 877 49 97 17 30 33 acres on which used: 305,558 134 1,166 695 1,039 1,266 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 405 69 73 17 29 9 acres: 74,786 266 913 391 930 293 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 2,229 720 736 81 101 87 acres: 217,276 3,101 12,198 2,846 5,656 6,812 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 427 15 62 19 28 25 acres: 166,621 60 849 472 1,154 1,525 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 1,798 222 379 64 83 60 acres: 641,103 446 2,663 1,408 1,645 2,465 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 2,102 136 319 72 87 84 acres: 983,544 375 3,500 1,840 2,903 4,658 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 4,226 241 719 131 251 212 acres: 1,842,044 833 11,046 4,610 11,063 13,437 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 1,326 187 307 63 69 38 acres: 127,777 399 3,103 1,472 1,815 1,653 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 2,717 119 345 48 102 96 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 1,682 435 560 41 73 62 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 1,427 389 467 36 61 60 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 99 9 18 3 1 2 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 10 - 4 - - 2 Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 191 39 95 5 16 5 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 82 11 24 1 3 5 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 83 6 15 - 2 - : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 17,125 5,363 5,974 676 885 647 Part owners ..............................................farms: 4,463 204 743 151 203 235 Tenants ..................................................farms: 1,289 218 260 54 45 78 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 21,665 5,589 6,734 829 1,091 889 acres: 8,813,519 57,233 203,021 76,533 116,261 137,167 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 21,588 5,567 6,717 827 1,088 882 acres: 7,737,908 26,338 135,988 42,743 79,911 87,413 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 5,829 434 1,011 208 262 324 acres: 3,852,080 2,112 17,023 8,649 12,831 25,264 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 5,752 422 1,003 205 248 313 acres: 3,810,055 1,511 16,710 8,048 11,839 23,996 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 3,262 497 793 166 191 187 acres: 1,117,636 31,496 67,346 34,391 37,342 51,022 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 44,714 10,794 13,099 1,628 2,115 1,907 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 6,958 1,642 2,063 314 408 299 2 producers ...............................................: 12,840 3,730 4,271 458 591 510 3 producers ...............................................: 1,621 193 354 60 72 81 4 producers ...............................................: 910 140 182 31 30 51 5 or more producers .......................................: 548 80 107 18 32 19 : Total male producers ........................................: 27,035 5,999 7,403 995 1,261 1,191 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 17,639 4,863 5,752 663 844 713 2 producers .............................................: 2,533 302 527 112 150 122 3 producers .............................................: 838 107 101 28 23 52 4 producers .............................................: 193 13 17 6 6 9 5 or more producers .....................................: 173 23 42 - 4 6 : Total female producers ......................................: 17,679 4,795 5,696 633 854 716 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 14,310 4,147 4,772 522 680 588 2 producers .............................................: 1,105 214 315 46 50 40 3 producers .............................................: 163 32 34 5 18 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 380 231 203 833 863 713 932 acres treated: 40,738 26,426 27,635 190,851 357,533 583,026 2,178,451 Manure used ..............................................farms: 119 88 63 285 245 228 242 acres treated: 5,100 5,520 3,756 28,591 45,609 52,492 164,923 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 10 8 12 35 37 18 43 acres treated: 481 390 1,105 6,687 6,813 10,362 26,137 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 131 77 83 344 363 334 465 acres: 12,469 10,214 12,038 68,987 123,822 226,780 829,202 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 379 205 191 813 832 701 939 acres: 35,207 21,057 25,278 156,097 325,528 505,765 2,072,849 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 38 20 16 63 91 97 197 acres: 2,950 1,005 1,189 6,996 17,626 32,209 246,106 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 54 29 32 125 189 164 318 acres: 3,664 2,225 2,977 22,461 52,204 104,554 564,209 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 46 23 11 113 115 116 227 acres on which used: 2,346 1,220 502 14,504 19,325 41,577 221,784 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 10 8 10 29 43 40 68 acres: 499 1,239 438 2,870 5,869 9,160 51,918 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 56 54 49 109 103 82 51 acres: 4,961 6,324 6,823 18,698 36,943 58,311 54,603 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 28 12 19 58 77 33 51 acres: 2,244 885 1,434 7,454 18,238 16,939 115,367 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 65 41 41 171 188 174 310 acres: 3,380 2,896 2,886 22,255 38,269 71,574 491,216 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 64 54 68 265 243 285 425 acres: 5,499 3,513 6,109 34,840 66,584 166,859 686,864 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 226 136 133 524 615 477 561 acres: 20,861 12,809 15,897 97,093 214,157 304,113 1,136,125 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 43 47 26 131 133 145 137 acres: 2,256 2,492 1,083 10,010 20,120 32,993 50,381 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 158 74 87 402 427 437 422 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 72 30 26 76 77 92 138 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 57 25 23 66 58 75 110 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 15 - 2 9 5 10 25 Methane digesters ......................................farms: - - - - - - 4 Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 1 5 2 3 8 4 8 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 10 - 1 5 8 4 10 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: - - - 12 10 9 29 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 649 335 266 889 699 382 360 Part owners ..............................................farms: 219 124 126 537 557 580 784 Tenants ..................................................farms: 59 58 40 140 128 86 123 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 875 460 392 1,431 1,264 964 1,147 acres: 163,350 125,046 90,469 506,901 800,154 993,343 5,544,041 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 868 459 392 1,426 1,256 962 1,144 acres: 116,782 78,283 76,503 411,425 689,897 912,128 5,080,497 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 278 185 173 681 696 667 910 acres: 30,222 25,178 28,916 160,707 284,493 531,846 2,724,839 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 278 182 166 677 685 666 907 acres: 29,400 24,405 26,602 156,289 279,272 528,923 2,703,060 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 168 115 69 302 321 191 262 acres: 47,390 47,536 16,280 99,894 115,478 84,138 485,323 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 1,866 937 800 3,333 2,937 2,266 3,032 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 279 196 159 504 445 295 354 2 producers ...............................................: 490 261 225 702 604 487 511 3 producers ...............................................: 90 28 25 193 183 166 176 4 producers ...............................................: 36 26 13 104 92 69 136 5 or more producers .......................................: 32 6 10 63 60 31 90 : Total male producers ........................................: 1,165 602 501 2,162 1,966 1,629 2,161 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 683 396 355 1,099 901 637 733 2 producers .............................................: 145 74 52 258 274 250 267 3 producers .............................................: 41 18 10 102 116 86 154 4 producers .............................................: 16 1 3 20 20 28 54 5 or more producers .....................................: 1 - - 27 17 20 33 : Total female producers ......................................: 701 335 299 1,171 971 637 871 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 561 259 223 810 700 486 562 2 producers .............................................: 37 30 23 115 79 46 110 3 producers .............................................: 11 4 4 17 16 9 13 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS - Con. : : Total producers - Con. : Total female producers - Con. : Farms by number of female producers: - Con. : : 4 producers .............................................: 83 20 28 1 - 2 5 or more producers .....................................: 58 6 15 - 4 8 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 26,384 5,898 7,270 988 1,242 1,158 Female ......................................................: 16,949 4,663 5,553 618 812 684 : Hired managers ................................................: 3,382 234 245 53 129 66 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 17,793 2,794 4,120 569 815 843 Other .......................................................: 25,540 7,767 8,703 1,037 1,239 999 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 33,141 9,148 10,549 1,200 1,345 1,243 Not on farm operated ........................................: 10,192 1,413 2,274 406 709 599 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 16,151 3,031 4,198 483 791 737 Any .........................................................: 27,182 7,530 8,625 1,123 1,263 1,105 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 4,566 1,004 1,421 193 236 149 50 to 99 days .............................................: 2,032 445 599 85 84 83 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 3,482 842 1,200 167 146 155 200 days or more ..........................................: 17,102 5,239 5,405 678 797 718 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 2,561 838 797 77 109 91 3 or 4 years ................................................: 4,392 1,433 1,410 190 200 169 5 to 9 years ................................................: 9,426 2,823 3,010 299 461 364 10 years or more ............................................: 26,954 5,467 7,606 1,040 1,284 1,218 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 19.0 14.8 16.9 19.9 19.9 21.2 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 7,099 2,506 2,176 285 329 279 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 7,699 2,369 2,605 267 311 282 11 years or more ............................................: 28,535 5,686 8,042 1,054 1,414 1,281 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 21.7 16.8 19.6 22.1 22.9 24.1 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 832 226 271 59 20 36 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 3,027 764 728 132 126 129 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 6,911 2,179 1,938 221 277 227 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 7,320 2,128 2,200 248 295 279 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 10,123 2,226 3,156 368 502 400 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 10,095 2,187 3,097 368 513 488 75 years and over ...........................................: 5,025 851 1,433 210 321 283 : Average age .................................................: 56.6 54.1 57.0 56.4 59.0 58.6 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 3,859 990 999 191 146 165 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 1,341 463 447 33 39 40 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 290 65 94 5 13 21 Asian .......................................................: 144 44 35 9 9 - Black or African American ...................................: 19 13 2 1 - - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 42 10 17 4 3 1 White .......................................................: 42,509 10,336 12,563 1,573 2,021 1,804 More than one race reported .................................: 329 93 112 14 8 16 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 39,671 9,569 11,533 1,452 1,833 1,701 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 3,662 992 1,290 154 221 141 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 86,167 20,408 23,426 3,092 4,038 3,519 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 37,172 9,274 11,246 1,314 1,734 1,567 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 32,598 7,788 9,793 1,218 1,562 1,378 Livestock decisions .........................................: 26,379 7,326 8,488 929 1,128 1,071 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 25,823 5,833 7,413 951 1,214 1,121 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 30,863 7,209 9,080 1,101 1,454 1,321 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 23,727 4,975 6,776 926 1,143 1,028 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 21,570 5,664 6,772 842 1,036 879 acres: 9,774,644 27,328 147,641 48,579 84,069 101,732 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 3,390 547 789 92 169 151 acres: 2,655,263 2,531 17,415 5,298 13,597 17,181 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS - Con. : : Total producers - Con. : Total female producers - Con. : Farms by number of female producers: - Con. : : 4 producers .............................................: 3 1 2 4 5 8 9 5 or more producers .....................................: 3 - 2 9 9 - 2 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 1,142 598 492 2,087 1,912 1,570 2,027 Female ......................................................: 659 332 284 1,068 898 597 781 : Hired managers ................................................: 130 57 69 381 542 575 901 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 745 500 408 1,753 1,725 1,486 2,035 Other .......................................................: 1,056 430 368 1,402 1,085 681 773 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 1,206 648 536 2,058 1,712 1,501 1,995 Not on farm operated ........................................: 595 282 240 1,097 1,098 666 813 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 728 329 334 1,484 1,304 1,113 1,619 Any .........................................................: 1,073 601 442 1,671 1,506 1,054 1,189 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 152 88 94 357 308 264 300 50 to 99 days .............................................: 105 70 58 140 135 103 125 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 169 55 47 227 214 115 145 200 days or more ..........................................: 647 388 243 947 849 572 619 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 91 57 41 165 153 88 54 3 or 4 years ................................................: 208 70 49 186 206 137 134 5 to 9 years ................................................: 414 193 122 562 517 289 372 10 years or more ............................................: 1,088 610 564 2,242 1,934 1,653 2,248 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 20.0 22.2 24.0 22.2 23.4 25.1 26.2 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 303 113 80 340 310 227 151 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 273 146 82 431 420 214 299 11 years or more ............................................: 1,225 671 614 2,384 2,080 1,726 2,358 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 23.9 25.3 27.6 25.4 26.5 28.4 29.3 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 60 16 7 32 52 39 14 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 94 101 59 263 215 170 246 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 194 125 81 465 404 336 464 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 219 109 135 418 456 374 459 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 470 219 145 783 687 490 677 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 496 188 207 777 649 506 619 75 years and over ...........................................: 268 172 142 417 347 252 329 : Average age .................................................: 59.4 57.9 59.8 57.8 57.0 56.6 56.6 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 154 117 66 295 267 209 260 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 51 9 34 68 50 53 54 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 31 9 11 7 13 6 15 Asian .......................................................: 6 1 1 7 15 11 6 Black or African American ...................................: - - - 1 - 1 1 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 1 - - 3 - 1 2 White .......................................................: 1,729 911 760 3,131 2,765 2,142 2,774 More than one race reported .................................: 34 9 4 6 17 6 10 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 1,654 847 728 2,919 2,672 2,075 2,688 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 147 83 48 236 138 92 120 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 3,380 1,858 1,631 6,893 6,084 5,210 6,628 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 1,454 798 648 2,582 2,308 1,835 2,412 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 1,331 687 570 2,243 2,100 1,710 2,218 Livestock decisions .........................................: 845 576 383 1,615 1,356 1,175 1,487 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 936 593 521 1,951 1,767 1,555 1,968 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 1,227 692 585 2,313 2,065 1,695 2,121 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 1,088 574 437 1,915 1,594 1,416 1,855 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 861 487 403 1,410 1,235 932 1,049 acres: 135,849 96,732 96,327 509,777 861,469 1,290,023 6,375,118 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 175 79 76 373 320 297 322 acres: 27,524 15,731 18,271 133,734 232,778 411,475 1,759,728 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 18,427 5,327 6,305 752 889 748 acres: 4,611,219 25,619 136,482 43,505 72,229 86,695 Partnership ..............................................farms: 1,752 165 230 52 103 73 acres: 2,798,624 834 5,859 2,946 8,208 8,452 Registered under State law .............................farms: 1,562 134 191 40 88 66 acres: 2,678,784 698 4,638 2,288 7,022 7,624 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 2,145 224 299 57 87 101 acres: 3,033,242 1,083 7,175 3,157 6,985 11,788 Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 186 258 45 58 84 acres: 2,758,073 874 6,173 2,515 4,722 9,791 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 35 6 4 - 1 - 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 1,848 180 254 45 57 84 : Other than family held .................................farms: 262 38 41 12 29 17 acres: 275,169 209 1,002 642 2,263 1,997 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 32 4 8 - - 2 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 230 34 33 12 29 15 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 553 69 143 20 54 38 acres: 1,104,878 313 3,182 1,183 4,328 4,474 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 5,697 694 910 158 243 207 workers: 42,990 2,670 3,689 647 1,115 962 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 3,478 276 388 60 127 113 workers: 21,741 917 1,399 237 537 566 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 3,988 522 695 120 180 134 workers: 21,249 1,753 2,290 410 578 396 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 714 9 19 4 15 11 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 32 6 2 - 2 3 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 8,421 2,289 2,837 314 371 365 workers: 21,358 5,683 6,872 787 908 881 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 5,785 5,785 - - - - 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 6,977 - 6,977 - - - 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 881 - - 881 - - 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 1,133 - - - 1,133 - 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 960 - - - - 960 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 927 - - - - - 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 517 - - - - - 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 432 - - - - - 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 1,566 - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 1,384 - - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 1,048 - - - - - 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 1,267 - - - - - : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 1,681 52 191 50 82 86 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 767 245 98 6 27 26 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 401 219 128 8 21 9 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 555 282 166 16 33 11 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 7,395 776 2,427 380 543 408 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 7,395 776 2,427 380 543 408 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 6,883 2,137 2,152 268 290 244 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 132 12 20 6 10 10 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 334 36 40 7 9 28 Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 179 103 65 2 3 - Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 601 328 239 5 13 6 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 1,092 560 402 33 29 15 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 2,857 1,035 1,049 100 73 117 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 17,963 5,591 6,664 818 963 787 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 1,235 23 65 13 50 59 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 1,207 32 22 6 14 16 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 875 18 13 1 5 9 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 290 - 8 4 4 8 Non-family farms ............................................: 1,307 121 205 39 97 81 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 19,417 4,959 5,888 725 877 770 Dial-up ...................................................: 537 107 173 21 19 24 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 10,022 2,748 2,904 337 415 350 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 12,438 3,179 3,622 467 557 486 Satellite .................................................: 5,457 1,345 1,743 214 254 215 Don't know ................................................: 905 183 275 41 58 48 Other .....................................................: 304 77 93 21 15 13 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 712 415 320 1,036 894 553 476 acres: 112,090 82,421 76,251 368,771 623,324 763,404 2,220,428 Partnership ..............................................farms: 73 38 42 224 207 182 363 acres: 11,575 7,556 10,108 84,574 148,838 247,731 2,261,943 Registered under State law .............................farms: 65 28 35 202 192 170 351 acres: 10,343 5,572 8,376 75,858 137,549 231,696 2,187,120 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 111 46 61 250 247 279 383 acres: 17,577 9,094 14,673 94,472 172,944 382,471 2,311,823 Family held ............................................farms: 103 43 54 216 234 260 342 acres: 16,320 8,492 13,043 82,673 163,891 356,903 2,092,676 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 3 - 3 4 7 - 7 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 100 43 51 212 227 260 335 : Other than family held .................................farms: 8 3 7 34 13 19 41 acres: 1,257 602 1,630 11,799 9,053 25,568 219,147 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: - - - 3 4 4 7 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 8 3 7 31 9 15 34 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 31 18 9 56 36 34 45 acres: 4,940 3,617 2,073 19,897 24,063 47,445 989,363 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 230 138 139 631 688 671 988 workers: 1,049 657 565 3,625 4,556 5,644 17,811 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 123 68 77 393 497 511 845 workers: 562 311 281 2,002 2,657 3,276 8,996 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 162 101 104 403 446 452 669 workers: 487 346 284 1,623 1,899 2,368 8,815 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 14 8 3 56 118 147 310 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: - 3 1 1 6 5 3 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 344 176 163 494 450 325 293 workers: 873 482 415 1,438 1,249 893 877 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: - - - - - - - 10 to 49 acres ................................................: - - - - - - - 50 to 69 acres ................................................: - - - - - - - 70 to 99 acres ................................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 927 - - - - - - 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: - 517 - - - - - 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: - - 432 - - - - 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: - - - 1,566 - - - 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: - - - - 1,384 - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: - - - - - 1,048 - 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: - - - - - - 1,267 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 92 41 60 214 277 232 304 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 36 20 11 44 57 58 139 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 3 4 3 3 1 1 1 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 15 2 8 9 10 3 - Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 455 238 189 734 570 376 299 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 455 238 189 734 570 376 299 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 195 122 106 384 319 285 381 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 10 4 2 8 15 13 22 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 15 11 6 44 53 36 49 Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 2 1 - 2 - - 1 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 5 3 - - 1 1 - Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 8 3 8 6 7 5 16 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 91 68 39 118 74 38 55 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 717 373 280 812 560 267 131 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 98 73 73 274 209 163 135 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 32 35 42 250 295 233 230 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 6 3 6 47 145 231 391 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 8 3 2 27 26 38 162 Non-family farms ............................................: 66 30 29 156 149 116 218 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 739 436 361 1,361 1,208 956 1,137 Dial-up ...................................................: 8 11 21 55 29 34 35 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 365 220 189 722 642 490 640 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 463 252 208 895 815 670 824 Satellite .................................................: 216 116 75 315 343 277 344 Don't know ................................................: 50 31 23 66 61 31 38 Other .....................................................: 11 11 3 25 7 16 12 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 18,831 5,185 6,170 737 881 755 2 households ................................................: 2,888 494 637 103 184 158 3 households ................................................: 661 48 97 39 35 18 4 households ................................................: 291 24 46 2 20 18 5 or more households ........................................: 206 34 27 - 13 11 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 8,956 2,169 2,585 361 425 367 number: 2,517,987 25,596 106,478 63,009 34,266 71,608 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 3,651 1,731 1,454 118 107 72 10 to 49 ..................................................: 2,769 393 987 185 226 174 50 to 99 ..................................................: 770 14 77 38 54 76 100 to 199 ................................................: 606 15 30 7 21 23 200 to 499 ................................................: 607 10 19 7 11 7 500 or more ...............................................: 553 6 18 6 6 15 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 7,712 1,685 2,119 311 380 340 number: 1,113,728 15,039 47,848 12,538 16,357 40,480 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 7,379 1,627 2,061 307 369 312 number: 449,249 12,486 22,487 7,332 8,994 8,999 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 3,402 1,380 1,412 134 136 100 10 to 49 ..............................................: 2,343 225 599 153 195 163 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 12 29 15 24 39 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 5 13 - 9 7 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 3 8 4 5 3 500 or more ...........................................: 161 2 - 1 - - : Milk cows ............................................farms: 549 108 117 11 21 34 number: 664,479 2,553 25,361 5,206 7,363 31,481 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 259 95 94 8 12 11 10 to 49 ..............................................: 21 - 2 - 4 8 50 to 99 ..............................................: 17 2 4 - - - 100 to 199 ............................................: 27 6 - - - 2 200 to 499 ............................................: 58 5 8 - 3 2 500 or more ...........................................: 167 - 9 3 2 11 : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 6,745 1,243 1,746 264 332 317 number: 1,404,259 10,557 58,630 50,471 17,909 31,128 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 7,630 1,634 1,973 307 353 330 number: 1,835,062 14,349 62,067 47,628 40,731 53,790 $1,000: 2,175,548 14,643 62,845 46,726 31,197 66,411 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 2,533 404 610 105 125 113 number: 485,342 2,472 13,488 2,819 24,943 13,974 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 7,198 1,491 1,799 280 338 315 number: 1,349,720 11,877 48,579 44,809 15,788 39,816 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 228 12 21 9 15 18 number: 492,887 1,680 1,973 432 (D) (D) : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 562 243 210 16 19 12 number: 21,157 4,370 11,197 113 611 107 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 517 233 195 14 13 12 25 to 49 ..................................................: 20 9 3 2 3 - 50 to 99 ..................................................: 5 - 5 - - - 100 to 199 ................................................: 6 - 3 - 3 - 200 to 499 ................................................: 9 - 3 - - - 500 or more ...............................................: 5 1 1 - - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 663 290 250 14 24 18 number: 100,260 8,959 (D) 92 659 138 $1,000: 23,779 2,018 (D) 22 156 39 : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 1,208 458 451 36 59 40 number: 230,681 6,796 10,111 1,557 5,440 (D) Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 840 336 273 39 42 29 number: 198,506 3,919 5,321 1,505 7,500 (D) : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 6,660 1,627 2,444 290 250 285 number: 41,412 7,559 14,918 1,702 1,841 1,634 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 989 269 380 50 40 33 number: 3,200 506 977 209 98 133 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 1,474 730 544 33 50 18 number: 24,780 8,757 7,823 405 1,389 800 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 702 360 245 17 24 3 number: 11,265 4,299 3,482 290 408 (D) : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 3,514 1,615 1,284 87 122 109 number: 638,424 68,581 (D) 1,708 2,276 14,282 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 3,500 1,610 1,282 87 122 107 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 9 4 - - - 1 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: 1 - - - - 1 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 2 1 - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: 2 - 2 - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 707 420 330 1,134 983 707 822 2 households ................................................: 167 70 79 268 265 214 249 3 households ................................................: 28 15 13 97 98 72 101 4 households ................................................: 20 7 7 44 12 36 55 5 or more households ........................................: 5 5 3 23 26 19 40 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 304 214 184 628 571 528 620 number: 81,132 46,982 43,406 246,734 427,565 326,480 1,044,731 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 34 23 24 45 19 20 4 10 to 49 ..................................................: 153 101 89 218 137 81 25 50 to 99 ..................................................: 61 34 35 145 108 77 51 100 to 199 ................................................: 22 32 21 101 112 120 102 200 to 499 ................................................: 22 19 8 62 123 153 166 500 or more ...............................................: 12 5 7 57 72 77 272 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 283 197 174 584 536 509 594 number: 21,179 29,007 15,111 77,562 140,236 148,033 550,338 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 267 188 170 548 494 479 557 number: 9,959 8,573 8,604 35,604 53,330 69,684 203,197 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 42 34 40 55 30 29 10 10 to 49 ..............................................: 173 102 98 277 193 110 55 50 to 99 ..............................................: 36 28 19 121 90 108 60 100 to 199 ............................................: 11 21 7 57 107 131 149 200 to 499 ............................................: 5 3 4 34 65 78 163 500 or more ...........................................: - - 2 4 9 23 120 : Milk cows ............................................farms: 25 19 8 50 57 45 54 number: 11,220 20,434 6,507 41,958 86,906 78,349 347,141 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 9 9 2 4 4 8 3 10 to 49 ..............................................: 4 - - 1 1 1 - 50 to 99 ..............................................: - 1 2 3 1 4 - 100 to 199 ............................................: 2 4 2 5 6 - - 200 to 499 ............................................: 4 - - 13 11 8 4 500 or more ...........................................: 6 5 2 24 34 24 47 : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 252 182 161 580 547 507 614 number: 59,953 17,975 28,295 169,172 287,329 178,447 494,393 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 289 199 163 635 578 541 628 number: 79,795 21,583 35,042 282,286 334,348 300,703 562,740 $1,000: 133,402 17,338 47,873 344,177 480,673 368,147 562,116 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 106 93 69 238 204 188 278 number: 6,990 7,495 5,408 89,859 45,811 83,631 188,452 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 285 183 154 626 570 534 623 number: 72,805 14,088 29,634 192,427 288,537 217,072 374,288 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 13 5 5 22 26 31 51 number: (D) 2,562 (D) 82,345 (D) 127,831 35,834 : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 9 4 3 17 17 10 2 number: 94 (D) 7 1,379 104 843 (D) Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 9 3 3 12 17 6 - 25 to 49 ..................................................: - - - 3 - - - 50 to 99 ..................................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ................................................: - - - - - - - 200 to 499 ................................................: - - - - - 4 2 500 or more ...............................................: - 1 - 2 - - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 11 8 5 15 16 9 3 number: 204 (D) 30 8,209 87 906 (D) $1,000: 41 (D) 7 910 22 234 (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 23 4 15 30 27 23 42 number: 1,692 (D) 4,159 5,535 18,707 41,866 115,506 Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 19 5 14 13 18 17 35 number: 1,396 (D) (D) 4,086 (D) 43,774 88,545 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 238 159 95 349 294 256 373 number: 1,580 1,201 459 2,092 2,092 2,268 4,066 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 30 32 5 40 34 19 57 number: 87 145 9 169 147 138 582 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 18 8 8 30 15 11 9 number: 304 289 (D) 359 769 (D) 1,758 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 14 4 5 13 7 3 7 number: 245 (D) 81 154 333 (D) 905 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 68 29 25 65 40 57 13 number: (D) 911 453 868 1,318 7,989 230 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 67 29 25 65 39 54 13 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: - - - - 1 3 - 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 1 - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 447 221 152 6 19 6 number: (D) 3,213 (D) 95 197 (D) : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 358 191 120 7 14 5 number: (D) 5,284 (D) 138 791 78 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 43 21 17 - 2 1 number: (D) 1,040 (D) - (D) (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 155 71 66 - 6 1 number: 11,815 4,469 5,090 - 100 (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 155 71 66 - 6 1 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 297 165 90 7 11 2 number: 4,644 954 2,472 43 33 (D) Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 95 52 30 - 5 - number: 4,156 441 2,343 - (D) - : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 1,322 19 44 15 52 46 acres: 538,586 76 774 507 1,467 2,349 bushels: 50,782,418 5,726 74,145 52,136 157,458 217,264 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,013 19 36 15 47 42 acres: 348,967 76 600 507 1,267 2,048 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 146 19 35 5 26 8 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 322 - 9 10 26 33 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 323 - - - - 5 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 243 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 288 - - - - - : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 648 35 56 13 36 11 acres: 126,508 78 1,087 299 1,025 441 bushels: 22,937,258 13,113 194,801 64,451 217,532 79,549 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 648 35 56 13 36 11 acres: 126,508 78 1,087 299 1,025 441 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 147 35 35 9 21 2 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 216 - 21 4 15 9 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 153 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 77 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 55 - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 772 18 30 8 20 35 acres: 258,326 66 572 284 736 1,685 tons: 7,412,427 1,813 17,537 6,287 22,404 48,325 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 770 18 30 8 20 35 acres: (D) 66 572 284 736 1,685 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 97 18 19 3 6 13 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 238 - 11 5 14 18 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 210 - - - - 4 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 97 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 130 - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 227 - 7 3 11 8 acres: 35,063 - 105 95 155 318 cwt: 868,671 - 2,445 3,108 3,544 8,563 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 213 - 7 3 11 8 acres: 31,511 - 105 95 155 318 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 37 - 6 2 9 3 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 92 - 1 1 2 5 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 62 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 22 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 14 - - - - - : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 115 - 2 - 5 6 acres: 11,088 - (D) - 104 163 bushels: 704,503 - (D) - 3,082 7,538 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 41 - - - - 2 acres: 4,324 - - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 22 - 2 - 3 3 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 60 - - - 2 3 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 27 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 3 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 3 - - - - - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 5 - - - - - acres: 485 - - - - - bushels: 52,100 - - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 4 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 12 10 - 13 6 - 2 number: 114 154 - 66 171 - (D) : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 6 1 - 6 3 5 - number: 138 (D) - 201 110 6,026 - : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 2 - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 4 - 5 - 1 - 1 number: (D) - 1,096 - (D) - (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 4 - 5 - 1 - 1 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 4 5 1 6 1 4 1 number: 10 138 (D) 76 (D) 902 (D) Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 2 1 1 1 - 3 - number: (D) (D) (D) (D) - 900 - : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 60 38 37 181 237 201 392 acres: 3,669 2,759 2,736 23,405 58,419 74,012 368,413 bushels: 419,454 336,705 327,976 2,602,022 5,830,330 6,554,479 34,204,723 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 52 34 33 153 184 134 264 acres: 2,650 2,380 2,662 19,334 45,377 49,443 222,623 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 19 8 6 6 7 3 4 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 27 18 19 62 53 28 37 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 14 12 12 96 72 53 59 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - 17 82 62 82 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - 23 55 210 : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 25 21 33 104 124 95 95 acres: 1,161 1,092 2,101 10,847 19,508 27,240 61,629 bushels: 218,917 233,615 350,371 1,942,746 3,997,264 5,253,284 10,371,615 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 25 21 33 104 124 95 95 acres: 1,161 1,092 2,101 10,847 19,508 27,240 61,629 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 8 8 2 14 3 8 2 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 15 10 28 29 50 15 20 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 2 3 3 55 46 24 20 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - 6 22 32 17 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - 3 16 36 : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 27 28 31 130 132 106 207 acres: 2,168 1,484 2,483 13,300 26,531 36,431 172,586 tons: 67,037 42,183 71,886 373,173 757,067 1,149,049 4,855,666 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 27 28 31 130 130 106 207 acres: 2,168 1,484 2,483 13,300 (D) 36,431 172,586 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 6 1 3 24 1 - 3 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 11 24 16 56 34 22 27 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 10 3 12 38 54 36 53 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - 12 33 27 25 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - 10 21 99 : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 11 6 6 43 37 50 45 acres: 428 194 270 2,790 3,902 7,430 19,376 cwt: 11,734 4,213 6,876 69,381 95,304 185,532 477,971 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 11 6 6 43 36 44 38 acres: 428 194 270 2,790 (D) (D) 16,818 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 1 1 1 10 3 1 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 10 5 5 25 15 16 7 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - 8 18 27 9 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - 1 5 16 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - 1 13 : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 6 - 4 14 21 24 33 acres: 500 - (D) 782 1,687 2,272 5,537 bushels: 66,856 - (D) 74,632 94,207 128,149 327,337 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 - 2 9 2 12 10 acres: (D) - (D) 535 (D) 1,548 1,472 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - 4 2 5 1 2 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 3 - - 12 7 21 12 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 3 - - - 9 1 14 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 3 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - 1 2 : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: - - 4 - - - 1 acres: - - (D) - - - (D) bushels: - - (D) - - - (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - 4 - - - - acres: - - (D) - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - 4 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 8 - 2 - - - acres: 304 - (D) - - - bushels: 9,092 - (D) - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 - - - - - acres: 205 - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 8 - 2 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 452 3 14 1 11 12 acres: 178,358 (D) 312 (D) 241 681 tons: 6,570,132 (D) 11,037 (D) 7,556 26,247 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 452 3 14 1 11 12 acres: 178,358 (D) 312 (D) 241 681 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: 10 - - - - - acres: 938 - - - - - pounds: 1,500,019 - - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 9 - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 3 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 2 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 2,210 20 121 34 89 69 acres: 1,162,597 103 2,420 875 3,378 4,322 bushels: 93,723,621 13,044 209,394 89,685 293,728 386,315 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,318 20 86 23 70 41 acres: 448,708 103 1,483 684 2,492 2,839 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 256 20 80 21 26 19 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 539 - 41 13 63 26 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 480 - - - - 24 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 317 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 618 - - - - - : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 10,279 1,383 3,231 428 568 474 acres: 1,415,865 5,657 44,560 13,333 22,833 26,154 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 13,079 116,469 40,298 71,938 85,518 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 8,042 1,267 2,458 325 406 331 acres: 1,102,400 5,100 33,370 10,084 16,985 18,468 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4,884 1,383 2,768 169 168 107 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 2,460 - 463 259 400 296 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1,560 - - - - 71 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 703 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 672 - - - - - : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 7,480 882 2,044 322 376 341 acres: 1,047,568 3,628 28,555 9,466 15,200 18,124 tons, dry: 3,926,331 9,587 89,165 34,398 53,999 66,447 Irrigated ............................................farms: 6,466 824 1,821 288 334 275 acres: 870,101 3,368 25,507 8,495 13,644 14,621 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 3,303 392 978 133 191 175 acres: 251,158 1,473 11,552 3,135 5,703 6,300 tons, dry: 582,333 2,955 20,038 4,563 9,565 10,747 Irrigated ............................................farms: 1,993 348 569 64 85 90 acres: 131,135 1,250 5,984 1,228 2,317 2,515 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 187 12 8 6 - 3 acres: 56,098 (D) 92 275 - 129 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 79 5 5 2 - 2 acres: 14,585 35 56 (D) - (D) : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 1,235 322 160 14 48 34 acres: 334,276 316 711 270 1,182 951 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,232 322 158 14 48 33 acres: 334,263 311 (D) 270 1,182 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 527 319 126 7 17 15 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 126 3 28 3 13 5 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 194 - 6 4 18 14 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 132 - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 256 - - - - - : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 195 78 31 3 16 9 acres: 5,237 20 96 (Z) 109 121 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 1 3 - 2 - acres: 767 (D) 70 - (D) - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 105 33 19 1 11 4 acres: 1,972 3 (D) (D) 45 30 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 4 1 - - - - acres: 190 (D) - - - - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 529 61 43 6 21 13 acres: 301,157 9 192 221 551 480 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 220 4 4 4 - 3 acres: 139,548 (Z) (D) 180 - 164 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: - - 4 1 1 - - acres: - - 160 (D) (D) - - bushels: - - 4,604 (D) (D) - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - 3 1 1 - - acres: - - (D) (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - 4 1 1 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 14 16 13 70 80 101 117 acres: 663 1,604 1,247 7,770 16,465 35,967 113,384 tons: 26,375 62,769 40,797 283,999 588,352 1,302,959 4,219,318 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 14 16 13 70 80 101 117 acres: 663 1,604 1,247 7,770 16,465 35,967 113,384 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: - - 5 - 3 - 2 acres: - - (D) - 331 - (D) pounds: - - (D) - 512,598 - (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - 5 - 3 - 1 acres: - - (D) - 331 - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - 4 - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - 1 - 1 - 1 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - 2 - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 112 61 71 300 374 378 581 acres: 8,689 3,591 5,116 37,666 86,960 183,090 826,387 bushels: 786,282 375,617 501,624 3,618,822 7,775,555 15,674,986 63,998,569 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 88 50 47 215 206 203 269 acres: 6,006 2,737 3,143 23,596 38,707 73,557 293,361 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 16 17 12 19 12 6 8 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 64 37 44 128 72 29 22 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 32 7 14 124 142 87 50 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - 1 29 111 92 84 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - 37 164 417 : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 388 285 252 878 838 666 888 acres: 30,695 23,641 26,396 124,964 189,965 229,545 678,122 tons, dry equivalent: 107,444 78,542 83,645 476,579 746,211 880,114 2,661,283 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 296 216 194 683 656 514 696 acres: 24,968 18,217 20,096 100,647 146,954 180,345 527,166 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 57 37 40 66 40 24 25 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 189 147 85 256 183 101 81 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 142 101 126 430 294 208 188 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - 1 126 227 171 178 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - 94 162 416 : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 300 214 206 720 705 589 781 acres: 23,072 16,875 20,696 92,616 141,677 174,383 503,276 tons, dry: 81,129 62,319 70,370 380,082 550,408 666,990 1,861,437 Irrigated ............................................farms: 257 185 178 619 581 479 625 acres: 20,306 14,556 18,102 82,476 118,536 145,002 405,488 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 131 101 57 302 289 225 329 acres: 5,520 4,872 3,952 24,044 34,380 34,836 115,391 tons, dry: 13,224 8,738 5,946 46,499 82,025 93,663 284,370 Irrigated ............................................farms: 80 52 29 176 166 130 204 acres: 3,384 2,267 1,051 12,199 15,300 19,886 63,754 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 2 4 8 19 29 44 52 acres: (D) 546 165 2,039 6,491 13,640 32,555 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 2 1 6 9 17 24 6 acres: (D) (D) (D) 564 3,270 6,707 3,595 : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 50 25 15 112 112 136 207 acres: 2,157 1,473 499 7,946 14,954 37,825 265,993 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 50 25 15 112 112 136 207 acres: 2,157 1,473 499 7,946 14,954 37,825 265,993 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 8 2 1 9 7 15 1 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 16 8 5 25 4 9 7 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 24 10 9 43 48 11 7 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 2 5 - 35 36 41 13 250.0 acres or more .......................................: - - - - 17 60 179 : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 8 11 - 21 2 10 6 acres: (D) 310 - 1,168 (D) 567 2,760 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 2 - - 10 - - 1 acres: (D) - - 641 - - (D) : Peas, green ............................................farms: 6 7 - 10 7 5 2 acres: 3 171 - 688 416 401 (D) Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - 2 - - 1 acres: - - - (D) - - (D) Potatoes ...............................................farms: 28 4 3 35 48 78 189 acres: 1,947 396 140 2,981 8,030 28,719 257,490 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 10 1 - 10 14 41 129 acres: 355 (D) - 687 2,483 11,836 123,465 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : 1 to 9 : 10 to 49 : 50 to 69 : 70 to 99 : 100 to 139 Item : Total : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in vegetables - Con. : Potatoes - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 118 61 37 2 8 6 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: 20 - 2 - 3 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 90 - 4 4 10 7 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 78 - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .....................................: 223 - - - - - : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 221 92 34 6 10 15 acres: 3,282 88 92 (D) 214 190 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 11 3 - 2 - acres: 344 25 18 - (D) - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 10 6 4 - - - acres: 1 1 1 - - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 215 124 63 3 12 3 acres: 62 20 24 (D) 11 (D) Harvested for processing .............................farms: 16 12 4 - - - acres: 3 2 1 - - - : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 567 300 176 14 29 12 acres: 5,523 283 502 57 311 139 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 565 300 174 14 29 12 acres: (D) 283 (D) 57 311 139 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 495 292 142 9 20 5 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 57 8 32 5 5 5 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 10 - 2 - 4 2 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 4 - - - - - : Apples .................................................farms: 320 162 107 10 14 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,936 86 118 30 28 33 : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 137 61 49 1 8 2 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,175 62 200 (D) (D) (D) : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 132 75 32 1 10 6 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,009 30 48 (D) 48 16 : Almonds ................................................farms: 8 3 5 - - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 2 1 1 - - - : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 22 15 5 1 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 19 11 (D) (D) - - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 268 146 79 8 13 12 acres: 207 84 59 15 8 20 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 71. Summary by Size of Farm: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 140 to 179 : 180 to 219 : 220 to 259 : 260 to 499 : 500 to 999 : 1,000 to 1,999 : 2,000 or more Item : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres : acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in vegetables - Con. : Potatoes - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 1 - - - - 3 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: 1 1 - 6 1 - 6 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 24 1 3 17 15 2 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 2 2 - 12 22 29 11 250.0 acres or more .....................................: - - - - 10 44 169 : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 7 6 2 22 10 14 3 acres: 90 112 (D) 701 726 528 (D) Harvested for processing .............................farms: - 2 - - - - 1 acres: - (D) - - - - (D) Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 7 - - - - 3 - acres: (D) - - - - 1 - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 3 5 3 10 3 7 5 acres: (D) 14 (D) (D) (D) 86 (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 3 5 3 10 3 7 5 acres: (D) 14 (D) (D) (D) 86 (D) Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 2 5 2 8 2 6 2 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: - - - - - - 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: - - 1 - - 1 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: - - - 2 1 - 1 : Apples .................................................farms: - 5 2 6 2 1 3 bearing and nonbearing acres: - 8 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 3 1 1 2 - 6 3 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) (D) (D) (D) - 85 (D) : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 1 - - 4 1 - 2 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) - - (D) (D) - (D) : Almonds ................................................farms: - - - - - - - bearing and nonbearing acres: - - - - - - - : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: - - - - 1 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: - - - - (D) - - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: - 2 1 1 4 2 - acres: - (D) (D) (D) 3 (D) - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included with total farm production expenses. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. 3/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 percent: 100.0 5.8 3.3 4.7 6.1 5.3 Land in farms ............................................acres: 11,547,963 4,560,427 1,372,237 1,424,488 1,247,045 562,267 Average size of farm .................................acres: 505 3,434 1,803 1,320 896 461 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 $1,000: 11,024,607 9,599,279 563,468 400,672 239,032 90,147 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 481,908 7,228,373 740,431 371,337 171,718 73,891 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 5,317 - - - - - $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 2,873 - - - - - $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 2,357 - - - - - $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 2,526 - - - - - $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 2,368 - - - - - : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,551 - - - - - $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,228 - - - - 1,141 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 1,415 - - - 1,319 78 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 1,102 - - 1,029 72 1 : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 778 - 728 50 - - $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 1,362 1,328 33 - 1 - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 639 605 33 - 1 - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 373 373 - - - - $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 350 350 - - - - : Total sales ............................................farms: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 $1,000: 10,892,201 9,538,291 544,075 385,349 224,272 86,286 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 3,530 991 550 606 523 295 $1,000: 1,626,831 1,231,776 201,917 122,865 48,535 13,286 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,497 953 514 523 371 136 $1,000: 1,607,176 1,230,843 201,115 120,618 44,885 9,716 Corn ...............................................farms: 1,117 407 160 196 136 81 $1,000: 405,868 325,625 36,858 28,254 9,733 3,398 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 788 390 129 155 85 29 $1,000: 398,382 324,970 35,805 27,192 8,196 2,219 Wheat ..............................................farms: 2,203 712 364 386 326 147 $1,000: 744,115 555,930 95,679 56,941 25,495 5,906 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1,538 679 326 299 181 53 $1,000: 730,200 554,777 94,776 55,003 22,035 3,609 Soybeans ...........................................farms: 8 - 1 3 1 - $1,000: 135 - (D) (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: 6 1 1 4 - - $1,000: 337 (D) (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 1 - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - - Barley .............................................farms: 1,319 428 255 229 185 90 $1,000: 349,414 259,963 48,792 26,501 9,919 2,803 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 838 366 213 162 76 21 $1,000: 341,143 258,677 47,919 25,176 7,877 1,494 Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 771 280 168 135 87 38 $1,000: 126,961 (D) (D) 10,975 (D) 1,179 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 479 242 122 74 29 12 $1,000: 121,065 89,278 19,271 9,582 2,159 775 Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 1,231 403 124 126 68 45 $1,000: 1,597,035 1,516,032 45,957 22,768 7,085 1,592 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 679 394 120 97 51 17 $1,000: 1,591,765 1,515,879 45,864 22,179 6,810 1,033 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 561 12 4 9 14 29 $1,000: 31,693 (D) (D) 1,972 1,335 1,580 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 38 3 1 6 9 19 $1,000: 27,916 (D) (D) 1,897 1,307 1,398 Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 446 12 1 9 11 21 $1,000: 29,683 (D) (D) (D) 1,271 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 29 3 - 6 8 12 $1,000: 26,766 (D) - 1,889 (D) (D) Berries ............................................farms: 234 - 4 2 8 15 $1,000: 2,010 - (D) (D) 65 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 7 - 1 - - 6 $1,000: 943 - (D) - - (D) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 599 32 32 35 64 48 $1,000: 122,254 77,197 20,838 9,982 8,112 2,279 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 183 31 31 31 57 33 $1,000: 117,897 (D) (D) 9,890 (D) 2,088 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 percent: 6.3 9.5 10.0 9.3 11.5 28.1 Land in farms ............................................acres: 333,179 243,952 137,316 76,735 67,528 1,522,789 Average size of farm .................................acres: 230 112 60 36 26 237 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 $1,000: 53,431 36,040 16,339 7,929 5,062 13,206 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 36,824 16,540 7,154 3,714 1,925 2,058 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: - - - - - 5,317 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: - - - - 2,587 286 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: - - - 2,093 15 249 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: - - 2,243 25 15 243 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: - 2,114 36 15 8 195 : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,392 53 4 2 3 97 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 56 12 1 - - 18 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 3 - - - 2 13 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: - - - - - - : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: - - - - - - $1,000,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: - - - - - - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: - - - - - - $5,000,000 or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Total sales ............................................farms: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 $1,000: 51,152 34,297 15,832 7,640 4,344 663 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 215 184 78 51 23 14 $1,000: 5,424 2,386 440 162 32 8 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Corn ...............................................farms: 57 41 16 12 11 - $1,000: 1,473 441 43 (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Wheat ..............................................farms: 106 85 44 24 3 6 $1,000: 2,662 1,121 285 89 3 5 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Soybeans ...........................................farms: - 3 - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Barley .............................................farms: 46 41 17 13 7 8 $1,000: 758 530 95 43 9 3 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 29 24 5 2 3 - $1,000: 531 (D) 16 (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 75 137 122 70 52 9 $1,000: 1,465 1,293 585 188 66 4 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 54 133 120 76 70 40 $1,000: 1,207 1,339 558 (D) 88 20 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 47 110 93 57 57 28 $1,000: 988 1,041 400 120 77 11 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Berries ............................................farms: 27 55 51 36 20 16 $1,000: 219 298 158 (D) 11 9 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 92 115 91 52 27 11 $1,000: 2,082 1,138 440 140 40 6 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 47 1 - - 2 1 $1,000: 673 (D) - - (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 1 - - - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) - - - (D) Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 47 1 - - 2 1 $1,000: 673 (D) - - (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 - - - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) - - - (D) Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 7,813 804 466 619 718 623 $1,000: 1,386,308 982,393 157,952 115,028 69,339 28,348 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,501 743 413 508 532 305 $1,000: 1,335,712 980,877 156,614 112,600 65,119 20,501 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 7,630 549 290 471 761 704 $1,000: 2,175,548 1,836,130 83,904 97,376 78,876 33,950 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,047 491 201 383 579 393 $1,000: 2,114,032 1,834,712 81,911 95,055 75,266 27,088 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 330 236 28 18 18 - $1,000: 3,727,378 3,704,683 15,279 5,108 2,124 - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 295 236 27 18 14 - $1,000: 3,727,100 3,704,683 (D) 5,108 (D) - Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 663 15 7 4 17 30 $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) (D) 263 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 18 6 4 1 1 6 $1,000: 22,239 (D) (D) (D) (D) 410 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 1,454 40 17 29 43 33 $1,000: 46,709 34,478 3,946 2,005 1,286 589 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 50 24 7 7 8 4 $1,000: 40,891 34,327 3,891 1,664 747 262 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 1,028 28 26 24 69 87 $1,000: 12,951 766 461 (D) 2,074 2,833 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 54 3 2 6 10 33 $1,000: 4,770 (D) (D) 735 1,321 1,940 Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 1,751 19 3 12 30 41 $1,000: 40,298 36,245 2 1,019 510 74 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 15 9 - 3 3 - $1,000: 37,584 36,231 - 963 390 - Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 51 20 7 5 5 3 $1,000: 76,464 68,428 5,067 1,864 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 39 20 7 5 5 2 $1,000: 76,279 68,428 5,067 1,864 (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 585 11 14 20 48 37 $1,000: 24,281 6,624 6,975 4,219 3,903 935 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 65 9 10 12 22 12 $1,000: 22,371 (D) 6,966 4,206 3,716 (D) : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 4,296 669 370 418 523 292 $1,000: 132,405 60,988 19,393 15,323 14,760 3,862 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 719 220 136 114 105 48 $1,000: 99,099 73,317 13,049 8,408 3,151 770 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 1,499 25 12 33 64 63 $1,000: 20,984 5,935 897 1,765 2,438 3,910 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 638 50 24 34 53 59 $1,000: 57,669 36,040 6,928 4,575 5,156 2,366 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 $1,000: 9,317,904 7,937,563 438,549 317,607 214,735 85,368 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 407,304 5,977,080 576,280 294,353 154,263 69,974 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 9,896 1,188 682 889 962 676 $1,000: 765,559 610,734 70,932 46,660 19,846 6,499 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 5,657 33 47 94 212 286 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,673 86 62 220 483 342 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 636 45 113 242 178 38 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,930 1,024 460 333 89 10 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 10,419 1,183 670 861 972 692 $1,000: 410,258 348,542 29,897 16,555 7,255 2,988 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,344 62 94 244 555 543 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 2 6 2 3 14 16 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 5 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 2 6 2 3 14 16 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) 5 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 648 858 789 745 906 637 $1,000: 15,517 9,343 4,457 2,227 1,354 350 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 796 1,162 1,081 928 773 115 $1,000: 20,671 13,996 6,269 3,025 1,277 74 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Milk from cows .......................................farms: 5 9 6 7 - 3 $1,000: (D) 82 (D) 7 - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 32 80 148 138 140 52 $1,000: 169 (D) 346 235 134 26 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 67 186 251 270 354 164 $1,000: 1,001 1,372 918 586 463 64 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 106 221 204 109 136 18 $1,000: 2,177 2,141 1,025 316 203 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 83 216 323 315 533 176 $1,000: 293 438 547 478 617 74 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 3 1 1 1 1 4 $1,000: 117 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 55 81 122 51 68 78 $1,000: 885 393 214 66 48 19 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 285 247 99 70 64 1,259 $1,000: 2,279 1,743 507 289 718 12,544 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 33 33 10 15 5 - $1,000: 272 98 17 16 2 - : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 112 248 296 238 296 112 $1,000: 1,213 2,509 1,154 826 294 42 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 67 87 103 63 74 24 $1,000: 1,130 639 540 188 98 10 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 $1,000: 61,842 56,414 39,255 28,256 30,809 107,506 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 42,620 25,890 17,187 13,235 11,714 16,751 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 721 911 866 704 813 1,484 $1,000: 3,177 2,244 1,154 663 690 2,959 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 495 792 813 692 808 1,385 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 215 118 53 11 2 81 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 11 - - - 2 7 $50,000 or more .........................................: - 1 - 1 1 11 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 668 995 901 810 936 1,731 $1,000: 1,230 960 500 368 298 1,665 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 614 950 893 807 935 1,647 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,444 161 199 401 358 137 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 523 143 181 142 43 9 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,108 817 196 74 16 3 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 7,732 1,164 644 780 809 551 $1,000: 378,944 314,206 28,089 16,470 10,242 2,723 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 2,522 4 10 20 49 93 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,881 34 49 106 249 287 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,602 126 185 442 432 162 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 515 127 161 143 55 8 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,212 873 239 69 24 1 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 1,065 169 57 93 79 64 $1,000: 4,094 2,379 494 512 221 102 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 6,503 367 220 320 479 371 $1,000: 722,700 659,651 14,819 12,625 14,241 4,162 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 4,196 29 38 67 124 139 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,502 56 78 120 191 190 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 476 61 60 98 136 42 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 140 61 25 30 23 - $250,000 or more ........................................: 189 160 19 5 5 - : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 3,243 263 174 261 377 272 $1,000: 121,882 90,287 6,345 6,600 8,770 2,540 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 4,301 182 95 118 185 160 $1,000: 600,818 569,364 8,474 6,025 5,471 1,623 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 13,525 565 290 508 789 765 $1,000: 2,598,813 2,469,261 28,712 22,324 19,843 11,930 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 8,387 44 42 94 193 299 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,621 55 80 171 314 300 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 912 63 71 182 257 158 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 207 45 66 54 23 8 $250,000 or more ........................................: 398 358 31 7 2 - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 21,557 1,327 752 1,071 1,364 1,188 $1,000: 395,457 289,983 31,163 21,753 16,658 7,056 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 15,681 26 25 148 398 647 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,613 90 235 606 824 511 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 862 157 274 247 99 29 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,401 1,054 218 70 43 1 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 15,852 1,328 760 1,071 1,311 1,044 $1,000: 357,174 280,920 24,434 15,705 11,698 4,813 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 4,788 10 12 44 108 114 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 6,414 68 110 208 407 612 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,982 210 303 620 732 313 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 605 189 191 157 46 4 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,063 851 144 42 18 1 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 18,678 1,328 760 1,071 1,360 1,152 $1,000: 632,154 480,674 42,503 30,771 25,466 11,142 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 11,397 31 30 119 265 431 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 4,430 42 162 492 776 624 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,046 106 199 283 238 85 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,805 1,149 369 177 81 12 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 5,697 1,291 588 684 650 362 $1,000: 1,043,118 894,059 52,779 36,517 24,182 7,268 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,583 5 19 57 106 125 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,302 37 94 198 224 148 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,427 200 296 355 283 83 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 639 381 139 51 27 5 $250,000 or more ........................................: 746 668 40 23 10 1 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 2,547 515 197 222 245 160 $1,000: 101,956 81,459 6,374 4,206 3,276 1,417 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 452 6 2 9 18 21 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 752 25 26 42 63 67 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 753 108 91 120 137 56 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 256 106 43 38 21 14 $50,000 or more .........................................: 334 270 35 13 6 2 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 5,857 856 451 549 576 456 $1,000: 247,148 197,684 16,903 13,278 8,348 3,387 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 1,290 3 8 24 36 61 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,893 22 47 76 165 141 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,497 139 194 287 290 235 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 401 109 115 94 59 13 $50,000 or more .........................................: 776 583 87 68 26 6 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 53 44 8 2 1 80 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1 1 - - - 3 $50,000 or more .........................................: - - - 1 - 1 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 536 653 554 467 543 1,031 $1,000: 2,281 1,403 749 574 402 1,805 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 161 323 365 316 448 733 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 276 269 162 126 83 240 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 92 57 25 24 12 45 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 4 3 2 1 - 11 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3 1 - - - 2 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 76 114 70 66 92 185 $1,000: 74 90 38 28 27 130 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 401 719 819 723 897 1,187 $1,000: 3,174 4,122 2,548 1,769 1,623 3,965 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 206 458 659 654 837 985 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 174 237 156 65 54 181 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 21 23 4 4 6 21 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: - 1 - - - - $250,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 246 357 291 246 288 468 $1,000: 1,932 1,828 814 546 599 1,622 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 209 498 652 579 719 904 $1,000: 1,242 2,294 1,734 1,223 1,024 2,343 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 939 1,400 1,525 1,405 1,729 3,610 $1,000: 8,954 9,804 6,744 4,538 4,846 11,856 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 435 750 1,058 1,114 1,428 2,930 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 429 587 447 280 294 664 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 74 59 19 11 6 12 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 1 4 1 - 1 4 $250,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 1,413 2,109 2,196 1,967 2,472 5,698 $1,000: 5,543 4,925 3,476 2,807 2,983 9,111 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,070 1,845 2,020 1,867 2,358 5,277 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 333 253 173 87 107 394 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 8 5 3 11 5 24 $50,000 or more .........................................: 2 6 - 2 2 3 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 1,152 1,608 1,565 1,377 1,489 3,147 $1,000: 3,761 3,437 2,498 1,912 1,891 6,104 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 240 550 714 738 811 1,447 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 670 907 762 564 615 1,491 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 240 148 89 75 63 189 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 2 3 - - - 13 $50,000 or more .........................................: - - - - - 7 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 1,326 1,898 1,881 1,668 1,961 4,273 $1,000: 8,982 7,257 5,249 3,534 4,139 12,439 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 704 1,444 1,579 1,502 1,742 3,550 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 560 434 290 158 212 680 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 53 17 12 8 5 40 $50,000 or more .........................................: 9 3 - - 2 3 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 327 380 253 236 246 680 $1,000: 5,887 3,858 3,134 1,827 1,686 11,921 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 149 228 160 158 177 399 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 112 108 66 69 59 187 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 54 43 18 6 7 82 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 12 1 9 3 3 8 $250,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - 4 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 160 164 132 139 156 457 $1,000: 918 1,073 411 391 395 2,037 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 40 39 44 53 70 150 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 62 66 68 61 74 198 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 54 48 16 25 9 89 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 4 7 4 - 3 16 $50,000 or more .........................................: - 4 - - - 4 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 406 558 448 390 425 742 $1,000: 1,888 1,709 1,020 612 746 1,573 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 82 153 153 202 237 331 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 183 303 254 168 175 359 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 135 101 39 19 11 47 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 5 - 2 - - 4 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1 1 - 1 2 1 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 5,471 1,047 559 690 760 504 $1,000: 550,451 454,824 36,531 30,334 14,142 5,244 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,036 20 42 98 217 213 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 590 25 40 61 117 99 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 871 69 90 169 242 139 $25,000 or more .........................................: 1,974 933 387 362 184 53 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 1,821 446 162 179 153 104 $1,000: 80,056 64,412 4,717 5,641 2,088 581 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 408 10 14 10 15 22 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 436 28 19 38 33 34 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 516 92 72 70 85 48 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 151 69 25 35 18 - $50,000 or more .........................................: 310 247 32 26 2 - : Interest expense .......................................farms: 6,805 1,041 520 662 716 457 $1,000: 286,045 211,068 16,142 15,265 12,124 5,230 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,537 65 81 147 225 210 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,688 160 225 313 338 198 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,113 431 185 176 140 45 $100,000 or more ........................................: 467 385 29 26 13 4 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 4,788 676 356 440 503 312 $1,000: 188,811 132,772 10,972 10,402 8,705 4,083 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 429 10 13 17 41 29 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,138 30 46 79 105 81 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 2,184 123 151 221 257 165 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 452 142 84 61 70 29 $50,000 or more .......................................: 585 371 62 62 30 8 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 4,230 762 371 459 455 284 $1,000: 97,234 78,296 5,170 4,863 3,419 1,147 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 780 21 15 44 68 59 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,752 59 93 125 171 176 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 1,098 204 211 248 197 44 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 288 192 44 31 12 5 $50,000 or more .......................................: 312 286 8 11 7 - : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 21,486 1,221 684 953 1,309 1,104 $1,000: 128,588 60,105 7,584 7,115 6,885 4,011 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 17,581 185 247 469 858 913 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,036 180 195 302 324 130 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,125 381 181 139 93 42 $25,000 or more .........................................: 744 475 61 43 34 19 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 9,388 569 299 478 715 644 $1,000: 172,113 153,090 3,579 3,468 3,298 1,602 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,856 68 112 203 439 552 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,128 165 150 262 265 91 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 143 91 32 10 7 1 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 91 76 5 2 4 - $100,000 or more ........................................: 170 169 - 1 - - : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 12,433 1,325 759 1,079 1,237 909 $1,000: 447,370 366,891 23,392 18,921 15,144 5,313 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,586 31 110 239 449 521 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,987 178 269 646 663 366 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 634 173 258 108 69 16 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 642 411 100 73 44 5 $100,000 or more ........................................: 584 532 22 13 12 1 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 867 252 138 85 98 58 $1,000: 36,781 25,182 5,724 2,661 1,935 355 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 15,202 1,328 759 1,065 1,325 1,047 $1,000: 892,639 644,998 59,560 56,655 41,964 18,586 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 $1,000: 2,034,090 1,797,750 154,981 119,085 58,130 19,109 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 88,914 1,353,728 203,655 110,366 41,760 15,663 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 8,958 1,148 636 898 1,020 869 Average net gain .................................dollars: 275,011 1,683,515 287,581 167,400 88,033 42,098 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 625 - - 2 4 9 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,519 2 1 3 39 37 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 841 6 4 14 30 74 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,326 5 10 31 103 204 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,020 29 25 57 180 314 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,627 1,106 596 791 664 231 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 443 427 268 186 173 414 $1,000: 2,787 1,979 698 533 435 2,944 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 273 321 229 161 160 302 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 86 73 25 13 6 45 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 71 25 11 9 5 41 $25,000 or more .........................................: 13 8 3 3 2 26 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 88 106 98 81 106 298 $1,000: 377 371 339 157 204 1,169 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 29 34 54 40 50 130 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 34 51 26 36 48 89 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 23 20 18 5 8 75 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 2 1 - - - 1 $50,000 or more .........................................: - - - - - 3 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 475 566 489 349 436 1,094 $1,000: 3,829 3,532 3,247 2,081 2,430 11,097 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 272 334 230 181 258 534 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 178 216 250 164 170 476 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 21 16 9 4 8 78 $100,000 or more ........................................: 4 - - - - 6 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 324 407 388 276 308 798 $1,000: 2,944 2,691 2,694 1,766 1,911 9,869 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 54 63 47 42 34 79 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 120 149 113 84 119 212 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 133 185 221 146 149 433 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 9 7 5 3 5 37 $50,000 or more .......................................: 8 3 2 1 1 37 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 302 319 242 159 229 648 $1,000: 884 840 553 315 519 1,228 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 87 96 97 61 68 164 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 167 185 110 83 140 443 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 47 37 35 15 19 41 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 1 1 - - 2 - $50,000 or more .......................................: - - - - - - : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 1,371 2,056 2,155 2,016 2,524 6,093 $1,000: 4,219 5,005 4,600 4,520 5,832 18,712 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,228 1,891 2,007 1,916 2,393 5,474 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 103 129 127 70 92 384 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 27 29 19 24 30 160 $25,000 or more .........................................: 13 7 2 6 9 75 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 776 1,091 1,036 817 991 1,972 $1,000: 1,379 1,367 1,010 629 795 1,896 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 715 1,058 1,012 805 973 1,919 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 61 32 23 12 18 49 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: - - 1 - - 1 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: - 1 - - - 3 $100,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 956 1,202 1,029 797 913 2,227 $1,000: 3,457 3,369 1,877 1,341 1,414 6,251 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 703 1,042 931 726 851 1,983 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 246 151 98 71 62 237 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 6 3 - - - 1 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1 6 - - - 2 $100,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - 4 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 46 52 27 33 25 53 $1,000: 321 197 62 45 40 259 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 1,160 1,592 1,432 1,191 1,400 2,903 $1,000: 16,003 13,874 10,146 6,745 7,108 17,000 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 $1,000: 1,083 -11,864 -16,807 -16,457 -22,764 -48,157 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 746 -5,444 -7,359 -7,708 -8,656 -7,503 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 879 1,060 751 412 229 1,056 Average net gain .................................dollars: 21,560 10,884 6,570 6,097 8,122 29,808 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 19 63 143 144 101 140 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 94 315 416 198 74 340 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 110 306 127 19 10 141 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 376 302 40 29 24 202 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 240 43 12 15 10 95 $50,000 or more .........................................: 40 31 13 7 10 138 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : : Farms with net losses .................................number: 13,919 180 125 181 372 351 Average net loss .................................dollars: 30,854 749,582 223,360 172,595 85,117 49,786 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 848 1 - 6 5 8 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,810 1 1 2 20 38 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,928 1 - 4 17 34 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,582 5 10 26 67 85 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,445 14 8 30 65 62 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,306 158 106 113 198 124 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 $1,000: 1,897,116 1,676,927 146,118 113,107 56,717 18,693 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 82,927 1,262,746 192,008 104,826 40,745 15,322 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 8,919 1,131 623 889 1,017 864 Average net gain .................................dollars: 263,468 1,619,879 282,051 163,629 87,332 42,099 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 636 - - 2 6 7 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,511 - 1 3 37 44 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 846 4 5 15 29 70 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,342 5 16 35 113 202 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 994 18 17 54 181 309 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,590 1,104 584 780 651 232 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 13,958 197 138 190 375 356 Average net loss .................................dollars: 32,437 787,593 214,488 170,311 85,599 49,665 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 843 1 - 6 4 7 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,827 1 3 4 18 39 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,922 1 - 6 16 36 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,574 6 10 29 66 83 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,453 14 8 25 73 66 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,339 174 117 120 198 125 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 39 22 6 3 4 1 $1,000: 5,255 5,046 51 (D) 34 (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 7,733 823 488 679 790 640 $1,000: 327,387 136,034 30,063 36,020 33,833 14,329 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 1,707 283 169 204 192 158 $1,000: 65,446 33,721 9,402 9,699 4,205 2,341 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 3,629 281 151 181 269 244 $1,000: 116,760 41,438 8,179 10,406 14,474 7,182 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 426 - 12 9 23 21 $1,000: 10,515 - 162 313 1,507 266 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 200 10 5 5 17 20 $1,000: 16,909 340 (D) 40 934 583 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 2,432 566 294 375 394 239 $1,000: 27,917 22,145 2,470 1,439 773 511 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 966 234 123 156 133 70 $1,000: 51,896 31,060 7,568 6,607 3,537 1,210 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 129 17 9 12 16 10 $1,000: 982 151 (D) 269 96 52 Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 870 122 45 70 84 74 $1,000: 36,961 7,179 2,008 7,248 8,308 2,183 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 15,823 1,233 716 1,005 1,256 1,040 acres: 5,623,516 3,198,130 694,831 528,907 428,800 162,197 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 13,037 1,227 713 988 1,232 999 acres: 4,370,363 2,833,532 579,845 395,081 270,442 111,689 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 7,454 24 17 48 147 295 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 1,154 11 22 52 179 310 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 1,197 44 55 138 403 249 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 1,342 111 169 483 391 123 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 826 237 249 214 103 21 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: 519 314 149 46 9 1 2,000 acres or more .....................................: 545 486 52 7 - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 1,737 109 65 114 150 115 acres: 214,761 62,358 19,385 41,774 30,294 13,998 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 983 87 59 59 104 66 acres: 59,462 14,675 7,849 5,914 8,008 3,916 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 3,822 300 145 183 225 157 acres: 660,805 151,759 40,126 26,311 87,948 22,407 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 1,696 240 165 172 233 134 acres: 318,125 135,806 47,626 59,827 32,108 10,187 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : : Farms with net losses .................................number: 572 1,119 1,533 1,723 2,401 5,362 Average net loss .................................dollars: 31,239 20,912 14,182 11,009 10,256 14,852 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 24 52 95 149 190 318 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 66 243 430 596 897 1,516 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 97 192 356 404 514 1,309 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 162 358 441 409 594 1,425 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 111 174 146 122 158 555 $50,000 or more .........................................: 112 100 65 43 48 239 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 $1,000: 1,132 -11,764 -16,762 -16,428 -22,726 -47,898 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 780 -5,399 -7,339 -7,694 -8,641 -7,463 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 883 1,063 749 413 229 1,058 Average net gain .................................dollars: 21,444 10,903 6,597 6,099 8,123 29,838 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 23 70 141 145 101 141 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 94 304 416 197 74 341 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 111 314 127 20 10 141 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 375 301 40 29 24 202 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 240 43 12 15 10 95 $50,000 or more .........................................: 40 31 13 7 10 138 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 568 1,116 1,535 1,722 2,401 5,360 Average net loss .................................dollars: 31,343 20,926 14,139 11,003 10,240 14,826 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 22 52 97 148 190 316 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 61 244 433 597 907 1,520 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 99 191 355 406 505 1,307 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 165 354 439 406 593 1,423 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 110 175 147 122 158 555 $50,000 or more .........................................: 111 100 64 43 48 239 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 3 - - - - - $1,000: 2 - - - - - : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 667 783 447 383 371 1,662 $1,000: 9,493 8,511 6,109 3,870 2,983 46,142 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 184 192 74 73 68 110 $1,000: 2,391 1,722 502 302 478 683 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 289 372 234 219 186 1,203 $1,000: 3,382 4,001 2,605 1,751 1,792 21,551 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 24 45 42 41 37 172 $1,000: 674 764 1,123 1,096 220 4,389 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 26 26 14 10 12 55 $1,000: 474 370 749 (D) 79 13,108 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 174 159 52 40 40 99 $1,000: 187 199 38 9 37 110 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 59 72 15 14 27 63 $1,000: 530 435 84 68 55 741 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 13 6 10 9 - 27 $1,000: 28 20 89 (D) - 130 Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 75 80 60 38 57 165 $1,000: 1,828 999 920 537 322 5,430 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 1,159 1,534 1,375 1,223 1,479 3,803 acres: 108,575 84,088 32,661 22,289 20,759 342,279 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 1,130 1,438 1,276 1,100 1,242 1,692 acres: 70,908 47,722 21,608 13,384 11,094 15,058 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 629 1,148 1,187 1,066 1,228 1,665 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 255 191 74 30 7 23 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 204 77 12 4 7 4 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 40 22 3 - - - 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 2 - - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: - - - - - - 2,000 acres or more .....................................: - - - - - - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 123 192 159 122 177 411 acres: 9,924 8,901 3,378 1,280 1,738 21,731 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 69 102 80 65 71 221 acres: 3,527 2,743 1,268 652 452 10,458 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 159 221 169 153 256 1,854 acres: 18,297 21,163 4,671 4,996 6,797 276,330 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 111 119 90 67 73 292 acres: 5,919 3,559 1,736 1,977 678 18,702 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 3,406 88 61 80 165 148 acres: 479,705 39,651 29,216 36,080 56,544 40,328 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 1,561 45 26 49 91 82 acres: 250,428 30,841 18,727 30,487 48,378 28,958 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 2,265 55 44 39 88 75 acres: 229,277 8,810 10,489 5,593 8,166 11,370 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 12,204 350 273 480 738 685 acres: 5,012,618 1,176,350 609,503 805,310 713,031 344,518 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 13,192 709 379 530 775 672 acres: 432,124 146,296 38,687 54,191 48,670 15,224 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 14,191 1,097 598 860 1,087 938 acres: 3,167,499 2,099,367 322,946 271,626 199,978 96,294 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 10,389 1,086 586 829 1,022 836 acres: 2,904,105 2,038,885 300,955 237,125 161,092 69,667 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 6,620 136 119 239 361 367 acres: 263,394 60,482 21,991 34,501 38,886 26,627 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 1,681 143 73 76 93 52 acres: 423,658 57,826 19,126 13,475 74,204 18,030 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 2,599 786 418 415 344 168 acres: 2,933,445 1,998,235 416,480 274,774 121,710 46,764 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 227 54 23 45 45 13 $1,000: 166,224 140,952 9,846 8,736 5,462 662 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 $1,000: 48,610,483 21,637,289 4,384,163 4,741,316 3,673,317 2,068,051 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,124,863 16,293,139 5,761,055 4,394,176 2,638,877 1,695,124 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,209 4,745 3,195 3,328 2,946 3,678 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,300 2 4 6 16 15 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,091 3 5 9 10 26 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 1,951 9 1 7 36 68 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 5,883 20 16 40 142 244 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 5,555 33 34 98 242 294 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 2,930 64 94 229 399 311 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 2,186 179 326 448 381 185 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 969 321 198 147 107 59 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 1,012 697 83 95 59 18 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 22,877 1,328 761 1,079 1,392 1,220 $1,000: 4,930,153 2,542,210 485,107 434,192 316,825 171,201 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 1,609 1 1 2 9 6 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 1,735 - 1 3 5 24 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 2,733 4 2 20 35 63 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 5,105 8 9 46 115 212 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 4,134 8 26 108 256 260 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 3,057 55 78 179 380 368 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 2,429 167 237 389 445 246 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 2,075 1,085 407 332 147 41 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 18,416 1,311 743 1,037 1,312 1,095 number: 54,948 17,597 4,336 4,392 4,289 2,822 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 16,968 1,290 728 988 1,257 1,056 number: 42,226 10,469 3,363 3,572 3,918 2,642 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 7,400 352 197 267 344 366 number: 9,283 667 320 354 473 457 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 9,749 769 413 551 831 699 number: 14,421 2,099 735 929 1,359 1,101 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 6,684 1,223 669 837 963 626 number: 18,522 7,703 2,308 2,289 2,086 1,084 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 2,292 735 392 373 294 142 number: 3,237 1,263 553 505 366 162 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - - number: - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 2,307 315 164 229 312 245 number: 2,680 484 194 264 358 278 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 6,213 613 395 567 735 536 number: 7,569 909 549 726 940 675 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 226 314 321 321 414 1,268 acres: 28,706 32,337 20,292 16,713 13,666 166,172 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 136 175 160 150 164 483 acres: 16,393 13,865 6,330 6,188 3,746 46,515 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 123 185 219 210 306 921 acres: 12,313 18,472 13,962 10,525 9,920 119,657 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 871 1,277 1,363 1,267 1,481 3,419 acres: 172,017 114,421 76,430 30,807 25,396 944,835 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 845 1,285 1,417 1,324 1,616 3,640 acres: 23,881 13,106 7,933 6,926 7,707 69,503 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 1,019 1,506 1,573 1,412 1,616 2,485 acres: 51,850 41,329 20,438 13,293 10,739 39,639 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 896 1,160 1,007 871 934 1,162 acres: 39,635 24,922 11,326 7,073 5,657 7,768 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 429 763 854 774 927 1,651 acres: 12,215 16,407 9,112 6,220 5,082 31,871 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 55 63 41 38 27 1,020 acres: 15,842 10,843 3,638 4,512 3,594 202,568 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 118 123 44 39 19 125 acres: 17,841 23,763 7,676 724 345 25,133 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 12 20 4 11 - - $1,000: 259 259 15 33 - - : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 $1,000: 1,634,490 1,585,462 1,365,777 1,119,309 1,319,752 5,081,556 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 1,126,458 727,610 597,976 524,267 501,807 791,766 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,906 6,499 9,946 14,587 19,544 3,337 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 62 123 180 193 234 465 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 57 122 132 151 154 422 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 90 212 230 240 267 791 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 382 640 754 706 954 1,985 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 454 670 674 612 751 1,693 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 239 274 224 167 218 711 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 122 114 75 61 46 249 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 26 15 13 4 5 74 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 19 9 2 1 1 28 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 1,451 2,179 2,284 2,135 2,630 6,418 $1,000: 148,381 157,742 126,768 97,650 111,269 338,809 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 18 75 174 218 367 738 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 42 151 231 271 305 702 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 111 284 337 348 456 1,073 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 347 572 698 644 738 1,716 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 381 565 466 399 474 1,191 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 336 358 245 185 212 661 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 201 156 124 65 78 321 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 15 18 9 5 - 16 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 1,274 1,859 1,869 1,660 2,021 4,235 number: 2,819 3,352 2,957 2,546 2,908 6,930 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 1,190 1,755 1,659 1,450 1,745 3,850 number: 2,499 3,095 2,508 2,071 2,408 5,681 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 424 792 839 802 1,035 1,982 number: 538 1,001 992 928 1,221 2,332 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 762 1,107 966 754 862 2,035 number: 1,135 1,470 1,196 919 1,000 2,478 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 569 506 259 190 161 681 number: 826 624 320 224 187 871 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 105 78 36 22 14 101 number: 112 91 38 24 14 109 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - - number: - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 219 226 164 106 123 204 number: 236 238 173 110 127 218 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 566 636 483 415 441 826 number: 671 724 545 453 479 898 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 8,673 1,171 670 864 921 626 acres treated: 3,496,612 2,326,799 460,774 325,788 197,820 72,420 Manure used ..............................................farms: 3,432 348 194 259 289 202 acres treated: 331,595 200,624 41,459 30,078 20,728 11,430 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 497 42 29 36 40 26 acres treated: 55,232 24,416 13,952 8,299 3,682 812 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 2,975 747 357 411 321 190 acres: 1,304,919 1,002,797 130,627 96,840 39,759 16,845 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 8,233 1,139 631 814 856 558 acres: 3,216,414 2,194,094 408,321 278,756 148,599 70,698 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 714 313 87 73 75 24 acres: 311,847 275,700 17,030 7,324 8,647 1,436 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 1,321 461 200 150 119 76 acres: 759,333 615,457 86,528 34,818 14,149 4,555 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 877 378 115 118 71 38 acres on which used: 305,558 271,175 16,336 11,510 3,822 1,149 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 405 81 37 27 24 21 acres: 74,786 46,240 15,161 3,744 3,054 774 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 2,229 106 77 102 100 146 acres: 217,276 85,850 37,876 25,676 14,376 18,917 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 427 21 25 21 32 29 acres: 166,621 47,243 26,832 7,905 25,660 12,242 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 1,798 296 177 173 149 120 acres: 641,103 439,568 97,531 44,183 26,033 11,729 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 2,102 471 247 279 242 119 acres: 983,544 648,752 161,832 98,151 47,661 7,394 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 4,226 842 434 538 569 420 acres: 1,842,044 1,309,061 205,911 158,898 85,592 34,290 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 1,326 228 84 104 133 89 acres: 127,777 74,856 13,320 11,060 9,138 3,899 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 2,717 660 412 463 332 161 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 1,682 101 51 52 105 92 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 1,427 73 42 47 79 78 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 99 14 7 5 8 10 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 10 4 - - - 1 Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 191 13 3 1 10 10 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 82 8 4 5 9 4 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 83 14 6 5 5 8 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 17,125 341 208 435 689 733 Part owners ..............................................farms: 4,463 827 459 499 582 348 Tenants ..................................................farms: 1,289 160 94 145 121 139 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 21,665 1,175 668 937 1,277 1,092 acres: 8,813,519 2,868,828 861,545 977,239 1,005,251 535,135 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 21,588 1,168 667 934 1,271 1,081 acres: 7,737,908 2,706,227 802,053 897,653 884,373 396,520 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 5,829 991 556 651 712 490 acres: 3,852,080 1,878,729 573,179 530,487 363,629 168,233 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 5,752 987 553 644 703 487 acres: 3,810,055 1,854,200 570,184 526,835 362,672 165,747 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 3,262 282 142 157 232 177 acres: 1,117,636 187,130 62,487 83,238 121,835 141,101 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 44,714 3,297 1,573 2,038 2,773 2,351 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 6,958 369 229 395 452 404 2 producers ...............................................: 12,840 468 347 503 680 641 3 producers ...............................................: 1,621 228 124 104 142 95 4 producers ...............................................: 910 171 43 64 76 54 5 or more producers .......................................: 548 92 18 13 42 26 : Total male producers ........................................: 27,035 2,475 1,135 1,391 1,815 1,477 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 17,639 675 479 791 1,007 980 2 producers .............................................: 2,533 333 181 206 259 151 3 producers .............................................: 838 191 73 42 73 34 4 producers .............................................: 193 80 12 14 4 5 5 or more producers .....................................: 173 35 5 1 11 13 : Total female producers ......................................: 17,679 822 438 647 958 874 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 14,310 556 342 522 705 709 2 producers .............................................: 1,105 82 39 57 109 62 3 producers .............................................: 163 18 2 1 9 9 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 630 781 682 559 619 1,150 acres treated: 34,375 24,534 11,211 5,954 6,440 30,497 Manure used ..............................................farms: 251 338 320 252 330 649 acres treated: 6,785 6,118 2,645 2,003 2,364 7,361 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 40 55 52 49 38 90 acres treated: 1,349 720 389 530 248 835 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 182 168 160 126 129 184 acres: 5,352 2,926 1,495 747 500 7,031 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 505 710 637 539 637 1,207 acres: 23,535 20,395 8,906 5,636 6,020 51,454 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 36 30 24 14 17 21 acres: 550 672 137 60 116 175 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 69 65 51 38 38 54 acres: 1,555 1,490 327 101 139 214 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 35 28 24 19 20 31 acres on which used: 629 473 132 49 128 155 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 20 32 26 31 31 75 acres: 1,195 1,108 632 618 169 2,091 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 141 259 262 244 284 508 acres: 6,218 9,049 4,361 2,829 2,248 9,876 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 17 30 27 5 13 207 acres: 3,922 3,956 4,395 596 1,568 32,302 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 132 170 128 107 100 246 acres: 6,268 2,730 962 1,371 496 10,232 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 148 153 97 84 88 174 acres: 5,587 6,956 1,767 785 632 4,027 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 316 339 209 143 113 303 acres: 15,464 10,071 3,830 2,415 986 15,526 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 97 151 75 70 97 198 acres: 3,168 2,541 681 443 454 8,217 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 134 122 108 53 45 227 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 89 179 181 176 219 437 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 78 158 167 152 202 351 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 10 12 3 4 3 23 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 2 - - - 3 - Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 10 15 17 21 16 75 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 9 8 3 7 3 22 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 6 4 5 - 4 26 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 966 1,690 1,953 1,900 2,369 5,841 Part owners ..............................................farms: 401 373 251 167 183 373 Tenants ..................................................farms: 84 116 80 68 78 204 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 1,381 2,068 2,206 2,070 2,564 6,227 acres: 287,749 224,138 135,506 87,136 71,784 1,759,208 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 1,367 2,063 2,204 2,067 2,552 6,214 acres: 238,860 175,897 109,962 68,429 58,795 1,399,139 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 490 495 335 241 265 603 acres: 94,858 69,221 27,650 8,674 8,867 128,553 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 485 489 331 235 261 577 acres: 94,319 68,055 27,354 8,306 8,733 123,650 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 255 318 209 198 198 1,094 acres: 49,428 49,407 25,840 19,075 13,123 364,972 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 2,888 4,099 4,255 3,978 4,879 12,583 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 432 657 638 572 725 2,085 2 producers ...............................................: 811 1,286 1,452 1,404 1,712 3,536 3 producers ...............................................: 101 118 115 93 115 386 4 producers ...............................................: 57 94 51 42 50 208 5 or more producers .......................................: 50 24 28 24 28 203 : Total male producers ........................................: 1,735 2,372 2,394 2,206 2,737 7,298 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 1,109 1,792 1,883 1,796 2,244 4,883 2 producers .............................................: 198 190 196 133 150 536 3 producers .............................................: 36 53 32 39 43 222 4 producers .............................................: 4 5 4 3 9 53 5 or more producers .....................................: 21 4 1 3 4 75 : Total female producers ......................................: 1,153 1,727 1,861 1,772 2,142 5,285 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 864 1,421 1,597 1,552 1,856 4,186 2 producers .............................................: 82 133 77 81 105 278 3 producers .............................................: 25 8 13 2 8 68 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS - Con. : : Total producers - Con. : Total female producers - Con. : Farms by number of female producers: - Con. : : 4 producers .............................................: 83 9 3 2 2 1 5 or more producers .....................................: 58 1 - - - 2 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 26,384 2,322 1,119 1,382 1,785 1,437 Female ......................................................: 16,949 719 420 639 925 854 : Hired managers ................................................: 3,382 1,474 461 413 336 148 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 17,793 2,526 1,149 1,429 1,672 1,210 Other .......................................................: 25,540 515 390 592 1,038 1,081 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 33,141 2,130 1,143 1,512 1,949 1,658 Not on farm operated ........................................: 10,192 911 396 509 761 633 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 16,151 2,036 833 1,071 1,233 862 Any .........................................................: 27,182 1,005 706 950 1,477 1,429 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 4,566 237 193 200 297 238 50 to 99 days .............................................: 2,032 83 66 152 144 138 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 3,482 84 81 139 216 236 200 days or more ..........................................: 17,102 601 366 459 820 817 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 2,561 59 59 130 141 114 3 or 4 years ................................................: 4,392 176 55 121 196 196 5 to 9 years ................................................: 9,426 317 248 409 458 418 10 years or more ............................................: 26,954 2,489 1,177 1,361 1,915 1,563 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 19.0 25.6 24.5 22.6 23.7 21.6 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 7,099 198 122 217 305 289 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 7,699 257 187 262 334 318 11 years or more ............................................: 28,535 2,586 1,230 1,542 2,071 1,684 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 21.7 28.5 27.2 26.0 27.5 25.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 832 37 28 45 42 46 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 3,027 321 145 206 260 238 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 6,911 588 307 399 393 310 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 7,320 521 298 318 407 368 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 10,123 752 344 461 626 492 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 10,095 607 292 379 616 530 75 years and over ...........................................: 5,025 215 125 213 366 307 : Average age .................................................: 56.6 54.0 53.6 54.3 56.7 56.5 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 3,859 358 173 251 302 284 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 1,341 101 26 76 66 54 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 290 2 8 11 25 31 Asian .......................................................: 144 21 5 9 3 3 Black or African American ...................................: 19 - - - 2 1 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 42 4 - - 5 2 White .......................................................: 42,509 3,005 1,525 1,988 2,667 2,239 More than one race reported .................................: 329 9 1 13 8 15 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 39,671 2,952 1,489 1,916 2,545 2,175 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 3,662 89 50 105 165 116 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 86,167 8,144 3,672 4,637 5,835 4,558 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 37,172 2,623 1,355 1,723 2,272 1,966 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 32,598 2,340 1,217 1,561 2,075 1,769 Livestock decisions .........................................: 26,379 1,321 711 980 1,534 1,420 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 25,823 2,179 1,221 1,506 1,946 1,611 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 30,863 2,362 1,240 1,588 2,019 1,808 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 23,727 1,998 954 1,248 1,602 1,438 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 21,570 1,107 668 946 1,242 1,142 acres: 9,774,644 3,737,077 1,222,352 1,159,993 1,104,821 491,798 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 3,390 425 193 300 291 243 acres: 2,655,263 1,266,435 401,999 358,600 187,898 89,167 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS - Con. : : Total producers - Con. : Total female producers - Con. : Farms by number of female producers: - Con. : : 4 producers .............................................: 11 - 14 10 13 18 5 or more producers .....................................: 1 3 3 1 - 47 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 1,689 2,356 2,373 2,193 2,713 7,015 Female ......................................................: 1,096 1,699 1,830 1,730 2,093 4,944 : Hired managers ................................................: 104 72 74 51 37 212 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 1,237 1,623 1,353 1,217 1,293 3,084 Other .......................................................: 1,548 2,432 2,850 2,706 3,513 8,875 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 2,083 3,252 3,620 3,463 4,262 8,069 Not on farm operated ........................................: 702 803 583 460 544 3,890 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 867 1,352 1,247 1,292 1,377 3,981 Any .........................................................: 1,918 2,703 2,956 2,631 3,429 7,978 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 275 416 423 330 595 1,362 50 to 99 days .............................................: 179 214 187 151 234 484 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 310 438 405 371 364 838 200 days or more ..........................................: 1,154 1,635 1,941 1,779 2,236 5,294 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 182 203 205 228 284 956 3 or 4 years ................................................: 297 407 502 538 571 1,333 5 to 9 years ................................................: 602 875 1,087 1,036 1,354 2,622 10 years or more ............................................: 1,704 2,570 2,409 2,121 2,597 7,048 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 20.2 18.8 16.4 16.2 15.7 17.4 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 472 612 757 854 971 2,302 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 473 641 951 826 1,133 2,317 11 years or more ............................................: 1,840 2,802 2,495 2,243 2,702 7,340 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 22.8 22.3 18.9 18.7 17.6 19.9 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 83 83 72 95 115 186 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 229 253 276 228 249 622 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 421 567 744 674 934 1,574 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 464 663 756 707 927 1,891 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 634 980 987 900 1,100 2,847 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 624 1,042 921 917 1,036 3,131 75 years and over ...........................................: 330 467 447 402 445 1,708 : Average age .................................................: 56.1 57.5 56.0 56.1 55.4 58.8 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 312 336 348 323 364 808 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 87 157 184 124 159 307 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 16 39 18 27 19 94 Asian .......................................................: 17 14 13 24 10 25 Black or African American ...................................: - 3 1 3 2 7 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 7 5 2 4 9 4 White .......................................................: 2,732 3,955 4,136 3,832 4,716 11,714 More than one race reported .................................: 13 39 33 33 50 115 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 2,567 3,714 3,839 3,494 4,264 10,716 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 218 341 364 429 542 1,243 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 5,478 7,578 7,824 7,411 8,903 22,127 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 2,361 3,525 3,748 3,495 4,222 9,882 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 2,095 3,077 3,206 3,027 3,606 8,625 Livestock decisions .........................................: 1,797 2,735 2,944 2,743 3,305 6,889 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 1,884 2,662 2,655 2,268 2,689 5,202 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 2,032 2,932 3,068 2,728 3,289 7,797 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 1,457 2,166 2,124 2,009 2,407 6,324 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 1,382 2,109 2,231 2,080 2,602 6,061 acres: 312,720 237,885 108,269 74,239 61,970 1,263,520 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 276 311 268 196 220 667 acres: 62,857 41,912 18,900 10,705 3,954 212,836 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 18,427 432 391 611 955 996 acres: 4,611,219 1,107,598 546,742 719,623 729,771 369,857 Partnership ..............................................farms: 1,752 403 135 176 182 93 acres: 2,798,624 1,781,691 344,774 251,370 152,037 58,310 Registered under State law .............................farms: 1,562 384 126 165 175 78 acres: 2,678,784 1,724,907 327,531 233,252 149,841 50,672 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 2,145 476 226 266 211 115 acres: 3,033,242 1,655,381 462,081 357,586 193,513 103,877 Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 430 202 229 187 99 acres: 2,758,073 1,524,226 445,321 314,031 136,778 94,627 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 35 6 1 3 - 4 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 1,848 424 201 226 187 95 : Other than family held .................................farms: 262 46 24 37 24 16 acres: 275,169 131,155 16,760 43,555 56,735 9,250 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 32 10 1 7 - 4 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 230 36 23 30 24 12 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 553 17 9 26 44 16 acres: 1,104,878 15,757 18,640 95,909 171,724 30,223 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 5,697 1,291 588 684 650 362 workers: 42,990 28,441 3,100 2,701 2,489 965 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 3,478 1,216 482 445 372 166 workers: 21,741 16,095 1,642 1,255 906 287 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 3,988 839 375 447 465 269 workers: 21,249 12,346 1,458 1,446 1,583 678 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 714 491 99 59 27 9 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 32 8 1 7 1 2 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 8,421 146 194 323 514 426 workers: 21,358 311 441 820 1,388 1,156 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 5,785 20 17 17 45 56 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 6,977 35 7 30 75 199 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 881 6 3 8 22 80 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 1,133 10 15 19 95 152 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 960 20 13 21 101 133 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 927 16 17 52 145 117 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 517 7 23 36 97 52 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 432 11 9 73 60 46 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 1,566 80 107 298 240 143 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 1,384 196 199 213 216 106 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 1,048 288 179 153 155 88 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 1,267 639 172 159 141 48 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 1,681 280 244 305 272 168 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 767 248 67 64 42 23 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 401 3 1 5 7 22 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 555 27 31 31 56 34 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 7,395 360 252 355 456 436 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 7,395 360 252 355 456 436 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 6,883 108 108 262 475 439 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 132 24 6 11 20 23 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 334 229 24 18 13 - Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 179 2 2 1 1 6 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 601 6 - 3 2 - Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 1,092 13 7 5 4 8 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 2,857 28 19 19 44 61 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 17,963 - 7 - 444 1,091 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 1,235 1 6 385 760 48 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 1,207 13 594 558 34 2 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 875 803 61 3 4 1 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 290 290 - - - - Non-family farms ............................................: 1,307 221 93 133 150 78 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 19,417 1,276 707 995 1,238 1,057 Dial-up ...................................................: 537 52 11 32 39 26 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 10,022 784 378 548 654 536 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 12,438 966 507 712 810 721 Satellite .................................................: 5,457 361 197 259 303 288 Don't know ................................................: 905 25 32 34 61 50 Other .....................................................: 304 11 8 9 18 21 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 1,187 1,895 2,052 1,995 2,484 5,429 acres: 242,604 181,814 90,014 65,902 57,895 499,399 Partnership ..............................................farms: 121 103 90 52 42 355 acres: 40,854 25,201 8,050 2,013 979 133,345 Registered under State law .............................farms: 112 87 87 44 32 272 acres: 40,355 22,495 7,671 1,714 560 119,786 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 107 133 94 69 69 379 acres: 46,096 28,837 17,776 8,104 7,195 152,796 Family held ............................................farms: 96 115 86 51 63 325 acres: 43,675 27,678 17,742 6,854 7,060 140,081 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 2 - - - - 19 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 94 115 86 51 63 306 : Other than family held .................................farms: 11 18 8 18 6 54 acres: 2,421 1,159 34 1,250 135 12,715 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: - 2 - - - 8 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 11 16 8 18 6 46 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 36 48 48 19 35 255 acres: 3,625 8,100 21,476 716 1,459 737,249 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 327 380 253 236 246 680 workers: 900 1,020 593 676 664 1,441 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 147 126 95 80 72 277 workers: 291 226 173 140 148 578 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 252 296 197 189 196 463 workers: 609 794 420 536 516 863 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 13 4 1 - 2 9 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 1 - 1 - 5 6 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 587 967 977 890 1,155 2,242 workers: 1,584 2,406 2,387 2,285 2,820 5,760 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 168 425 860 909 1,334 1,934 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 413 936 997 939 1,045 2,301 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 119 163 81 67 84 248 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 146 145 99 70 68 314 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 109 100 80 54 30 299 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 85 91 38 21 25 320 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 52 54 36 11 4 145 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 60 31 16 16 12 98 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 144 131 38 29 15 341 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 102 57 26 15 8 246 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 29 40 7 3 3 103 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 24 6 6 1 2 69 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 143 138 59 41 17 14 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 38 77 95 49 44 20 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 33 80 75 55 53 67 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 70 83 64 41 40 78 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 459 621 625 628 830 2,373 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 459 621 625 628 830 2,373 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 539 854 918 854 742 1,584 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 24 21 2 1 - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 2 9 2 1 - 36 Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 4 8 32 55 58 10 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 6 12 41 123 396 12 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 28 82 120 150 288 387 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 105 194 251 137 162 1,837 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 1,377 2,108 2,223 2,078 2,601 6,034 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 5 1 8 2 1 18 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: - - - - - 6 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: - - - - - 3 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: - - - - - - Non-family farms ............................................: 69 70 53 55 28 357 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 1,249 1,877 1,966 1,774 2,265 5,013 Dial-up ...................................................: 27 57 54 45 50 144 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 643 900 1,039 963 1,149 2,428 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 798 1,196 1,221 1,126 1,366 3,015 Satellite .................................................: 332 566 601 508 710 1,332 Don't know ................................................: 70 94 64 75 86 314 Other .....................................................: 19 28 34 22 35 99 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 18,831 814 505 796 1,033 981 2 households ................................................: 2,888 300 166 191 273 188 3 households ................................................: 661 107 77 58 60 31 4 households ................................................: 291 67 10 26 17 10 5 or more households ........................................: 206 40 3 8 9 10 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 8,956 539 283 462 733 694 number: 2,517,987 2,006,972 118,795 127,764 115,489 52,690 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 3,651 5 13 13 34 49 10 to 49 ..................................................: 2,769 36 33 50 108 207 50 to 99 ..................................................: 770 21 21 53 116 252 100 to 199 ................................................: 606 25 51 92 232 151 200 to 499 ................................................: 607 75 67 184 236 35 500 or more ...............................................: 553 377 98 70 7 - : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 7,712 490 266 428 695 652 number: 1,113,728 800,780 67,629 81,138 73,854 33,713 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 7,379 300 243 418 679 650 number: 449,249 142,146 64,086 79,860 73,292 33,675 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 3,402 9 12 22 31 57 10 to 49 ..............................................: 2,343 72 42 73 146 301 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 25 34 49 164 217 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 46 46 88 250 71 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 61 55 168 86 4 500 or more ...........................................: 161 87 54 18 2 - : Milk cows ............................................farms: 549 232 27 21 27 14 number: 664,479 658,634 3,543 1,278 562 38 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 259 3 - 3 12 14 10 to 49 ..............................................: 21 - 1 7 12 - 50 to 99 ..............................................: 17 - 8 6 3 - 100 to 199 ............................................: 27 8 14 5 - - 200 to 499 ............................................: 58 54 4 - - - 500 or more ...........................................: 167 167 - - - - : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 6,745 519 265 444 709 656 number: 1,404,259 1,206,192 51,166 46,626 41,635 18,977 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 7,630 549 290 471 761 704 number: 1,835,062 1,499,370 78,589 93,568 78,793 35,159 $1,000: 2,175,548 1,836,130 83,904 97,376 78,876 33,950 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 2,533 300 115 170 268 235 number: 485,342 427,928 10,269 16,939 12,857 5,942 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 7,198 544 280 465 759 693 number: 1,349,720 1,071,442 68,320 76,629 65,936 29,217 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 228 71 17 21 34 34 number: 492,887 482,808 3,055 2,097 2,616 1,336 : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 562 12 9 4 10 19 number: 21,157 12,123 (D) (D) 582 1,718 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 517 4 5 3 6 8 25 to 49 ..................................................: 20 - 2 - 2 2 50 to 99 ..................................................: 5 2 - - - - 100 to 199 ................................................: 6 - - - - 6 200 to 499 ................................................: 9 4 - - 2 3 500 or more ...............................................: 5 2 2 1 - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 663 15 7 4 17 30 number: 100,260 (D) 8,656 (D) 1,707 (D) $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) (D) 263 (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 1,208 36 16 31 35 41 number: 230,681 171,552 20,368 11,586 2,526 3,171 Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 840 33 12 22 32 18 number: 198,506 156,346 17,720 6,362 3,226 2,004 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 6,660 168 143 254 402 369 number: 41,412 1,986 1,418 2,025 3,084 3,211 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 989 27 26 24 64 87 number: 3,200 483 94 112 320 497 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 1,474 8 9 12 21 38 number: 24,780 271 498 2,979 3,078 1,789 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 702 9 5 7 13 15 number: 11,265 259 270 1,501 1,101 525 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 3,514 24 18 22 59 79 number: 638,424 569,632 169 1,104 4,612 1,282 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 3,500 16 18 22 56 79 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 9 3 - - 3 - 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: 1 1 - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 2 2 - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: 2 2 - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 1,175 1,874 1,989 1,922 2,355 5,387 2 households ................................................: 209 222 221 170 225 723 3 households ................................................: 36 52 41 25 21 153 4 households ................................................: 6 24 32 10 6 83 5 or more households ........................................: 25 7 1 8 23 72 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 781 1,085 935 839 832 1,773 number: 34,650 24,196 10,807 6,867 5,131 14,626 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 88 294 530 621 677 1,327 10 to 49 ..................................................: 437 710 387 211 154 436 50 to 99 ..................................................: 208 71 15 7 - 6 100 to 199 ................................................: 43 8 2 - 1 1 200 to 499 ................................................: 5 2 1 - - 2 500 or more ...............................................: - - - - - 1 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 713 953 783 658 681 1,393 number: 21,328 14,666 6,551 3,773 2,844 7,452 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 706 944 772 636 662 1,369 number: 21,289 14,578 6,482 3,687 2,783 7,371 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 108 345 527 531 612 1,148 10 to 49 ..............................................: 505 587 244 103 50 220 50 to 99 ..............................................: 81 8 - 2 - 1 100 to 199 ............................................: 12 3 1 - - - 200 to 499 ............................................: - 1 - - - - 500 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Milk cows ............................................farms: 19 49 37 40 35 48 number: 39 88 69 86 61 81 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 19 49 37 40 34 48 10 to 49 ..............................................: - - - - 1 - 50 to 99 ..............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 199 ............................................: - - - - - - 200 to 499 ............................................: - - - - - - 500 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 691 823 597 548 502 991 number: 13,322 9,530 4,256 3,094 2,287 7,174 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 796 1,162 1,081 928 773 115 number: 22,058 15,734 6,490 3,418 1,713 170 $1,000: 20,671 13,996 6,269 3,025 1,277 74 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 294 370 282 233 200 66 number: 5,026 3,640 1,356 805 482 98 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 761 1,105 1,019 852 659 61 number: 17,032 12,094 5,134 2,613 1,231 72 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 27 21 2 1 - - number: 628 319 (D) (D) - - : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 26 65 104 88 109 116 number: 351 470 1,005 630 605 500 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 21 61 98 86 109 116 25 to 49 ..................................................: 2 4 6 2 - - 50 to 99 ..................................................: 3 - - - - - 100 to 199 ................................................: - - - - - - 200 to 499 ................................................: - - - - - - 500 or more ...............................................: - - - - - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 32 80 148 138 140 52 number: 745 1,525 1,798 1,237 688 185 $1,000: 169 (D) 346 235 134 26 : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 63 120 150 148 219 349 number: 3,557 3,891 3,920 2,692 3,097 4,321 Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 45 98 150 141 196 93 number: 3,252 2,984 2,871 1,856 1,566 319 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 488 719 611 543 744 2,219 number: 3,307 4,257 3,277 2,331 3,241 13,275 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 105 214 193 107 128 14 number: 451 531 302 184 212 14 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 57 145 177 232 323 452 number: 1,283 2,849 2,588 2,705 2,750 3,990 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 31 110 123 158 184 47 number: 920 2,144 1,701 1,441 1,282 121 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 160 353 546 548 793 912 number: 5,628 8,118 12,154 11,914 14,852 8,959 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 157 353 546 548 793 912 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 3 - - - - - 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 447 5 - 2 9 13 number: (D) (D) - (D) 629 250 : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 358 6 2 2 5 6 number: (D) (D) (D) (D) 186 380 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 43 1 - - - 2 number: (D) (D) - - - (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 155 1 1 1 1 5 number: 11,815 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1,092 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 155 1 1 1 1 5 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 297 4 - - 8 8 number: 4,644 902 - - (D) (D) Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 95 3 - - 2 8 number: 4,156 900 - - (D) (D) : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 1,322 431 255 229 185 90 acres: 538,586 362,829 94,844 47,844 22,333 6,403 bushels: 50,782,418 37,219,129 7,242,473 3,930,290 1,584,755 513,513 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,013 335 180 185 142 69 acres: 348,967 253,122 47,586 31,069 10,801 4,071 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 146 5 2 13 33 23 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 322 32 48 70 76 41 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 323 78 72 91 52 23 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 243 112 82 32 16 1 500 acres or more .........................................: 288 204 51 23 8 2 : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 648 230 88 106 85 42 acres: 126,508 95,346 12,319 11,614 4,739 1,310 bushels: 22,937,258 17,460,903 2,244,213 2,028,485 799,113 200,563 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 648 230 88 106 85 42 acres: 126,508 95,346 12,319 11,614 4,739 1,310 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 147 8 14 7 13 27 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 216 49 30 45 61 12 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 153 65 30 45 10 3 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 77 57 11 8 1 - 500 acres or more .........................................: 55 51 3 1 - - : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 772 397 115 113 65 39 acres: 258,326 228,003 15,401 9,448 3,261 1,581 tons: 7,412,427 6,529,668 458,390 273,948 87,046 47,936 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 770 397 115 111 65 39 acres: (D) 228,003 15,401 (D) 3,261 1,581 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 97 4 7 25 15 11 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 238 61 47 53 41 28 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 210 126 45 30 9 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 97 76 16 5 - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 130 130 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 227 96 48 35 27 9 acres: 35,063 26,398 4,845 2,296 1,069 285 cwt: 868,671 662,311 108,768 57,853 27,114 8,276 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 213 90 40 35 27 9 acres: 31,511 24,491 3,200 2,296 1,069 285 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 37 1 5 7 9 4 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 92 26 23 20 17 5 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 62 35 18 8 1 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 22 21 1 - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 14 13 1 - - - : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 115 27 24 16 18 7 acres: 11,088 3,812 3,681 1,127 1,259 228 bushels: 704,503 265,617 204,776 88,368 91,828 12,024 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 41 14 7 9 6 3 acres: 4,324 1,782 1,306 552 489 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 22 5 3 - 1 1 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 60 11 13 13 11 6 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 27 7 6 3 6 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 3 3 - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 3 1 2 - - - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 5 1 - 4 - - acres: 485 (D) - (D) - - bushels: 52,100 (D) - (D) - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 - - 4 - - acres: (D) - - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 4 - - 4 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 1 - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 30 57 77 86 80 88 number: 663 811 1,213 1,221 1,291 706 : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 14 58 71 64 95 35 number: 1,347 4,305 1,931 1,041 2,145 211 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 1 7 7 9 10 6 number: (D) 169 274 182 755 30 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 14 23 22 25 23 39 number: 1,360 3,664 1,418 1,066 1,444 446 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 14 23 22 25 23 39 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 20 22 59 37 67 72 number: 109 167 582 153 398 204 Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 7 12 24 7 24 8 number: 139 (D) 302 46 221 14 : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 46 41 17 13 7 8 acres: 1,769 1,820 511 155 28 50 bushels: 151,155 113,008 18,594 7,390 1,636 475 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 37 30 10 11 6 8 acres: 1,241 749 160 (D) (D) 50 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 14 19 12 10 7 8 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 31 16 5 3 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1 6 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 44 23 12 7 11 - acres: 898 185 45 18 34 - bushels: 161,523 32,285 5,451 1,776 2,946 - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 44 23 12 7 11 - acres: 898 185 45 18 34 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 27 22 11 7 11 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 17 1 1 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 16 18 4 5 - - acres: 345 255 17 15 - - tons: 7,578 7,061 440 360 - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 16 18 4 5 - - acres: 345 255 17 15 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 9 17 4 5 - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 7 1 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 5 5 2 - - - acres: 94 (D) (D) - - - cwt: 2,706 (D) (D) - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 5 2 - - - acres: 94 (D) (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 5 2 - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 1 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 8 9 3 - 3 - acres: 624 273 54 - 30 - bushels: 30,588 7,253 2,485 - 1,564 - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - 2 - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 3 4 2 - 3 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - 5 1 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 5 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 8 - 1 3 1 - acres: 304 - (D) (D) (D) - bushels: 9,092 - (D) (D) (D) - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 - 1 3 1 - acres: 205 - (D) (D) (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 8 - 1 3 1 - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 452 242 83 68 37 14 acres: 178,358 151,043 17,784 6,969 2,168 300 tons: 6,570,132 5,626,392 607,097 241,256 81,434 10,884 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 452 242 83 68 37 14 acres: 178,358 151,043 17,784 6,969 2,168 300 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: 10 4 - 6 - - acres: 938 777 - 161 - - pounds: 1,500,019 1,136,019 - 364,000 - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 9 3 - 6 - - acres: (D) (D) - 161 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 - - 4 - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 3 1 - 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 2 2 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 1 - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 2,210 713 364 386 326 147 acres: 1,162,597 806,486 176,859 104,793 49,849 12,048 bushels: 93,723,621 69,018,849 12,656,850 7,227,704 3,430,600 820,712 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,318 453 210 237 188 93 acres: 448,708 352,919 45,529 27,415 15,833 4,124 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 256 5 9 39 37 34 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 539 46 81 109 122 76 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 480 125 81 109 107 25 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 317 138 53 63 48 11 500 acres or more .........................................: 618 399 140 66 12 1 : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 10,279 902 503 710 953 787 acres: 1,415,865 640,789 190,856 178,920 170,024 82,090 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 3,060,451 683,701 650,816 462,172 208,432 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 8,042 805 433 617 802 672 acres: 1,102,400 558,640 142,671 138,866 119,663 56,401 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4,884 31 19 30 48 98 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 2,460 98 73 129 286 398 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1,560 203 152 297 417 221 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 703 168 146 160 153 58 500 acres or more .........................................: 672 402 113 94 49 12 : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 7,480 820 450 642 828 674 acres: 1,047,568 490,536 149,715 131,737 127,488 60,328 tons, dry: 3,926,331 2,170,658 528,560 498,847 361,943 162,204 Irrigated ............................................farms: 6,466 736 397 569 713 593 acres: 870,101 439,570 113,896 110,617 97,414 44,680 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 3,303 208 159 222 295 234 acres: 251,158 77,741 31,149 40,439 32,724 17,717 tons, dry: 582,333 217,316 84,615 105,869 64,803 33,663 Irrigated ............................................farms: 1,993 148 114 160 197 167 acres: 131,135 47,044 19,191 22,029 16,315 9,177 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 187 69 41 15 24 9 acres: 56,098 27,935 15,592 3,112 6,427 791 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 79 36 14 8 8 2 acres: 14,585 11,662 2,079 186 483 (D) : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 1,235 403 124 123 67 45 acres: 334,276 317,352 8,517 6,048 1,381 388 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,232 403 124 123 67 45 acres: 334,263 317,352 8,517 6,048 1,381 387 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 527 6 8 6 19 29 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 126 6 24 43 29 12 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 194 47 63 60 18 4 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 132 88 29 14 1 - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 256 256 - - - - : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 195 14 22 17 12 14 acres: 5,237 3,372 1,012 616 26 95 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 1 2 8 - - acres: 767 (D) (D) 257 - - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 105 11 8 14 13 7 acres: 1,972 1,026 238 651 22 27 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 4 1 - 2 - - acres: 190 (D) - (D) - - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 529 285 63 43 36 17 acres: 301,157 292,809 5,369 2,096 844 25 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 220 173 21 12 10 - acres: 139,548 136,543 2,081 (D) 500 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: - 3 - - - - acres: - 99 - - - - bushels: - 4,867 - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - 3 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 5 1 2 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - tons: 2,721 (D) (D) - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 1 2 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 106 85 44 24 3 12 acres: 7,090 3,812 1,007 584 9 60 bushels: 352,814 158,312 36,757 11,624 1,125 8,274 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 51 42 25 10 3 6 acres: 1,535 772 482 36 9 54 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 32 44 31 10 3 12 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 47 32 12 14 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 24 8 1 - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 3 1 - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 874 1,085 977 908 1,083 1,497 acres: 58,165 37,905 19,544 12,341 10,768 14,463 tons, dry equivalent: 131,579 80,927 34,148 19,341 13,801 15,752 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 679 840 720 695 774 1,005 acres: 34,337 22,119 10,227 6,693 5,388 7,395 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 169 571 731 773 1,004 1,410 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 517 441 232 131 72 83 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 172 70 13 4 7 4 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 14 3 1 - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 2 - - - - - : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 704 818 645 580 605 714 acres: 37,097 22,638 9,955 6,545 5,018 6,511 tons, dry: 94,270 58,173 22,430 12,715 7,878 8,653 Irrigated ............................................farms: 598 696 549 509 511 595 acres: 26,886 16,655 7,268 4,900 3,569 4,646 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 291 341 332 288 371 562 acres: 16,887 13,899 7,667 4,579 3,488 4,868 tons, dry: 29,867 20,852 9,862 5,676 4,382 5,428 Irrigated ............................................farms: 158 183 177 162 208 319 acres: 5,845 4,767 2,222 1,406 1,259 1,880 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 7 12 3 7 - - acres: 204 2,000 (D) (D) - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 6 3 - 2 - - acres: (D) 56 - (D) - - : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 69 136 122 69 51 26 acres: 222 188 80 48 34 18 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 69 135 120 69 51 26 acres: 218 (D) (D) 47 34 18 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 61 130 122 69 51 26 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 6 6 - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 2 - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: - - - - - - : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 17 43 26 11 8 11 acres: 94 10 9 1 1 1 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 6 1 1 - - - acres: 89 (D) (D) - - - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 9 25 6 6 - 6 acres: 1 (D) (D) 1 - 3 Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - 1 - - - acres: - - (D) - - - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 12 37 10 10 11 5 acres: 3 6 1 1 3 1 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 1 3 - - - - acres: (D) (Z) - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in vegetables - Con. : Potatoes - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 118 - - 4 14 15 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: 20 - 6 6 6 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 90 6 37 32 15 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 78 56 20 1 1 - 250.0 acres or more .....................................: 223 223 - - - - : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 221 25 19 26 8 9 acres: 3,282 1,550 723 632 214 27 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 1 - 2 2 - acres: 344 (D) - (D) (D) - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 10 - - - - - acres: 1 - - - - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 215 - 1 3 13 13 acres: 62 - (D) 9 11 3 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 16 - - - - - acres: 3 - - - - - : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 567 13 1 9 13 22 acres: 5,523 3,670 (D) 518 305 257 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 565 13 1 9 13 22 acres: (D) 3,670 (D) 518 305 257 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 495 8 1 3 4 9 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 57 2 - 1 6 10 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 10 - - 4 2 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 - - - 1 - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 4 3 - 1 - - : Apples .................................................farms: 320 4 1 5 9 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,936 (D) (D) (D) 48 14 : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 137 9 - 5 3 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,175 (D) - 124 (D) 143 : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 132 2 1 3 8 7 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,009 (D) (D) (D) 53 30 : Almonds ................................................farms: 8 - - - 1 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 2 - - - (D) - : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 22 1 - - - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 19 (D) - - - - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 268 - 4 2 8 16 acres: 207 - (D) (D) (D) 52 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 72. Summary by Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in vegetables - Con. : Potatoes - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 12 37 10 10 11 5 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .....................................: - - - - - - : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 18 49 24 19 17 7 acres: 61 49 16 5 4 1 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 7 5 2 - - - acres: 24 18 (D) - - - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 1 3 2 4 - - acres: (D) (D) (D) (Z) - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 27 58 39 26 20 15 acres: 9 10 5 5 (D) 2 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 2 3 5 - 2 4 acres: (D) (D) 1 - (D) (Z) : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 51 119 118 62 72 87 acres: 157 239 125 54 (D) 142 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 51 119 118 62 72 85 acres: 157 238 124 54 (D) 133 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 34 104 115 61 72 84 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 17 15 3 1 - 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: - - - - - 1 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: - - - - - - : Apples .................................................farms: 26 80 77 26 38 46 bearing and nonbearing acres: 47 106 41 8 20 19 : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 20 28 22 22 8 12 bearing and nonbearing acres: 68 50 19 25 3 42 : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 9 26 26 15 23 12 bearing and nonbearing acres: 9 20 8 6 9 (D) : Almonds ................................................farms: 1 4 - 2 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) 1 - (D) - - : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: - 8 3 3 3 4 bearing and nonbearing acres: - (D) (Z) 1 (Z) 1 : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 27 61 60 40 24 26 acres: 24 53 20 20 8 6 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included with total farm production expenses. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. 3/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 percent: 100.0 6.0 3.4 4.8 6.2 5.4 Land in farms ............................................acres: 11,547,963 4,830,475 1,393,402 1,384,899 1,164,849 528,723 Average size of farm .................................acres: 505 3,547 1,791 1,257 823 431 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 $1,000: 11,024,607 9,635,695 556,578 393,956 228,094 86,145 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 481,908 7,074,666 715,396 357,492 161,197 70,151 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 5,317 - - - - - $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 2,873 - - - - - $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 2,357 - - - - - $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 2,526 - - - - - $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 2,368 - - - - - : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,551 - - - - - $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,228 - - - - 1,228 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 1,415 - - - 1,415 - $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 1,102 - - 1,102 - - : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 778 - 778 - - - $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 1,362 1,362 - - - - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 639 639 - - - - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 373 373 - - - - $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 350 350 - - - - : Total sales ............................................farms: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 $1,000: 10,892,201 9,569,298 536,073 378,154 215,429 82,044 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 3,530 1,020 551 611 507 289 $1,000: 1,626,831 1,250,218 193,496 117,837 44,580 12,609 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,497 982 514 521 353 127 $1,000: 1,607,176 1,249,286 192,679 115,322 40,924 8,965 Corn ...............................................farms: 1,117 407 160 198 134 81 $1,000: 405,868 325,625 36,858 28,267 9,720 3,398 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 788 390 129 155 85 29 $1,000: 398,382 324,970 35,805 27,192 8,196 2,219 Wheat ..............................................farms: 2,203 741 362 394 306 142 $1,000: 744,115 568,285 91,007 53,411 22,226 5,349 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1,538 708 323 299 163 45 $1,000: 730,200 567,132 90,079 51,212 18,822 2,956 Soybeans ...........................................farms: 8 - 1 3 1 - $1,000: 135 - (D) (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: 6 1 1 4 - - $1,000: 337 (D) (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 1 - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - - Barley .............................................farms: 1,319 447 252 217 186 87 $1,000: 349,414 262,986 47,216 25,378 9,676 2,735 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 838 382 207 154 74 21 $1,000: 341,143 261,625 46,254 24,140 7,631 1,494 Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 771 301 156 141 73 39 $1,000: 126,961 (D) (D) 10,588 (D) 1,128 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 479 258 113 70 27 11 $1,000: 121,065 92,157 17,211 8,993 2,002 704 Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 1,231 404 123 126 68 45 $1,000: 1,597,035 1,517,032 44,957 22,768 7,085 1,592 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 679 395 119 97 51 17 $1,000: 1,591,765 1,516,879 44,864 22,179 6,810 1,033 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 561 12 4 9 14 29 $1,000: 31,693 (D) (D) 1,972 1,335 1,580 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 38 3 1 6 9 19 $1,000: 27,916 (D) (D) 1,897 1,307 1,398 Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 446 12 1 9 11 21 $1,000: 29,683 (D) (D) (D) 1,271 992 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 29 3 - 6 8 12 $1,000: 26,766 (D) - 1,889 (D) (D) Berries ............................................farms: 234 - 4 2 8 15 $1,000: 2,010 - (D) (D) 65 588 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 7 - 1 - - 6 $1,000: 943 - (D) - - (D) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 599 32 35 32 64 48 $1,000: 122,254 77,197 21,753 9,067 8,112 2,279 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 183 31 34 28 57 33 $1,000: 117,897 (D) (D) 8,975 (D) 2,088 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 percent: 6.8 10.4 11.0 10.3 12.6 23.2 Land in farms ............................................acres: 412,691 323,252 172,528 104,824 96,421 1,135,899 Average size of farm .................................acres: 266 137 68 44 34 214 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 $1,000: 55,116 37,567 17,510 8,447 4,767 731 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 35,536 15,864 6,932 3,584 1,659 138 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: - - - - - 5,317 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: - - - - 2,873 - $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: - - - 2,357 - - $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: - - 2,526 - - - $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: - 2,368 - - - - : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,551 - - - - - $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: - - - - - - $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: - - - - - - $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: - - - - - - : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: - - - - - - $1,000,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: - - - - - - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: - - - - - - $5,000,000 or more ......................................: - - - - - - : Total sales ............................................farms: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 $1,000: 49,738 33,385 15,654 7,508 4,266 651 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 218 172 76 50 22 14 $1,000: 5,366 2,098 429 158 30 8 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Corn ...............................................farms: 57 42 16 12 10 - $1,000: 1,473 442 43 (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Wheat ..............................................farms: 107 76 42 24 3 6 $1,000: 2,564 900 276 89 3 5 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Soybeans ...........................................farms: - 3 - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Barley .............................................farms: 45 40 18 12 7 8 $1,000: 743 530 99 40 9 3 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 31 21 4 2 3 - $1,000: 585 (D) 11 (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 78 135 126 69 48 9 $1,000: 1,475 1,284 592 187 59 4 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 57 131 123 76 66 40 $1,000: 1,245 1,305 557 202 86 20 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 50 108 92 57 57 28 $1,000: (D) 1,020 397 120 77 11 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Berries ............................................farms: 30 53 54 36 16 16 $1,000: (D) 285 160 81 9 9 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 96 114 91 49 27 11 $1,000: 2,137 1,090 440 133 40 6 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 47 1 - - 2 1 $1,000: 673 (D) - - (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 1 - - - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) - - - (D) Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 47 1 - - 2 1 $1,000: 673 (D) - - (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 - - - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) - - - (D) Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 7,813 823 465 635 724 621 $1,000: 1,386,308 990,694 152,873 114,870 68,081 27,220 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,501 762 407 517 532 283 $1,000: 1,335,712 989,178 151,426 112,242 63,843 19,023 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 7,630 560 307 483 777 692 $1,000: 2,175,548 1,839,381 88,137 96,422 76,182 31,498 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,047 497 216 396 584 354 $1,000: 2,114,032 1,837,790 86,128 94,129 72,093 23,893 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 330 236 28 19 17 - $1,000: 3,727,378 3,704,683 15,279 5,208 2,024 - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 295 236 27 19 13 - $1,000: 3,727,100 3,704,683 (D) 5,208 (D) - Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 663 15 7 5 19 29 $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) (D) 157 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 18 6 4 2 - 6 $1,000: 22,239 (D) (D) (D) - (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 1,454 40 19 28 43 33 $1,000: 46,709 34,478 3,986 2,154 1,100 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 50 24 7 8 7 4 $1,000: 40,891 34,327 3,891 1,853 558 262 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 1,028 31 26 24 66 91 $1,000: 12,951 778 476 (D) 2,057 2,874 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 54 3 2 6 10 33 $1,000: 4,770 (D) (D) 735 1,321 1,940 Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 1,751 19 3 13 32 39 $1,000: 40,298 36,245 2 1,020 510 76 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 15 9 - 3 3 - $1,000: 37,584 36,231 - 963 390 - Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 51 20 7 5 5 3 $1,000: 76,464 68,428 5,067 1,864 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 39 20 7 5 5 2 $1,000: 76,279 68,428 5,067 1,864 (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 585 11 17 21 50 39 $1,000: 24,281 6,624 8,271 3,727 3,377 899 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 65 9 13 13 22 8 $1,000: 22,371 (D) 8,263 3,715 3,188 (D) : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 4,296 703 387 441 546 300 $1,000: 132,405 66,397 20,505 15,802 12,665 4,101 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 719 233 136 110 103 42 $1,000: 99,099 74,542 12,527 8,049 2,911 671 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 1,499 25 12 33 66 63 $1,000: 20,984 5,935 897 1,765 2,439 3,914 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 638 50 26 33 53 60 $1,000: 57,669 36,040 7,358 4,388 4,989 2,351 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 $1,000: 9,317,904 7,967,038 435,684 310,283 206,767 82,994 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 407,304 5,849,514 560,005 281,564 146,125 67,585 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 9,896 1,220 692 905 958 658 $1,000: 765,559 616,455 68,736 45,011 18,690 6,047 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 5,657 34 49 98 219 291 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,673 87 71 232 492 326 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 636 46 113 259 169 31 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,930 1,053 459 316 78 10 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 10,419 1,216 676 882 961 689 $1,000: 410,258 350,902 29,297 15,603 6,884 2,834 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 2 7 4 2 12 16 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 2 7 4 2 12 16 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 636 878 797 734 884 616 $1,000: 15,116 9,233 4,404 2,160 1,315 342 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 789 1,155 1,067 917 768 115 $1,000: 19,817 13,651 6,148 2,974 1,266 74 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Milk from cows .......................................farms: 5 9 6 7 - 3 $1,000: 78 82 16 7 - (Z) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 31 79 149 137 140 52 $1,000: 166 273 349 232 134 26 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 69 185 252 270 351 164 $1,000: (D) 1,367 928 581 456 64 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 108 217 202 109 136 18 $1,000: 2,194 2,097 1,011 316 203 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 84 218 325 317 529 172 $1,000: 294 441 545 484 609 71 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 3 1 1 1 1 4 $1,000: 117 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 50 78 122 51 68 78 $1,000: 669 368 214 66 48 19 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 385 436 341 292 307 158 $1,000: 5,378 4,182 1,856 939 501 80 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 33 33 9 15 5 - $1,000: 272 96 14 16 2 - : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 117 244 300 240 291 108 $1,000: 1,237 2,487 1,158 828 282 42 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 68 86 103 62 73 24 $1,000: 1,071 645 535 187 97 10 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 $1,000: 62,908 57,974 41,563 29,702 32,910 90,081 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 40,560 24,482 16,454 12,602 11,455 16,942 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 743 929 907 720 831 1,333 $1,000: 3,433 2,227 1,148 764 768 2,282 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 507 810 859 699 819 1,272 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 223 119 48 18 9 48 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 12 - - 2 2 2 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1 - - 1 1 11 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 715 1,066 991 878 972 1,373 $1,000: 1,418 1,087 588 460 376 809 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : : Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,344 64 98 260 564 545 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,444 166 204 418 347 133 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 523 154 178 141 36 9 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,108 832 196 63 14 2 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 7,732 1,194 650 794 804 543 $1,000: 378,944 317,343 26,608 15,864 9,463 2,621 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 2,522 4 10 23 49 95 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,881 34 51 110 267 282 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,602 127 201 456 417 158 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 515 134 161 140 53 7 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,212 895 227 65 18 1 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 1,065 171 57 94 76 67 $1,000: 4,094 2,390 491 512 213 109 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 6,503 374 234 328 491 348 $1,000: 722,700 660,146 15,284 12,856 13,513 4,025 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 4,196 31 43 64 136 130 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,502 57 80 133 194 178 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 476 64 65 96 136 40 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 140 61 28 28 22 - $250,000 or more ........................................: 189 161 18 7 3 - : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 3,243 269 186 270 383 255 $1,000: 121,882 90,666 6,488 6,986 8,195 2,492 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 4,301 186 97 122 185 152 $1,000: 600,818 569,481 8,796 5,870 5,318 1,533 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 13,525 575 309 521 809 757 $1,000: 2,598,813 2,469,667 30,369 22,074 19,190 11,485 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 8,387 48 42 94 210 293 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,621 58 82 180 322 310 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 912 65 79 189 259 146 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 207 46 75 51 16 8 $250,000 or more ........................................: 398 358 31 7 2 - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 21,557 1,361 768 1,095 1,384 1,195 $1,000: 395,457 292,076 30,876 21,357 16,054 6,936 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 15,681 27 26 162 414 670 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,613 90 247 629 848 496 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 862 171 286 234 89 27 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,401 1,073 209 70 33 2 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 15,852 1,362 777 1,094 1,318 1,044 $1,000: 357,174 282,133 24,220 15,444 11,503 4,704 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 4,788 10 13 52 104 123 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 6,414 76 114 214 427 616 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,982 223 313 638 728 299 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 605 196 194 151 43 5 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,063 857 143 39 16 1 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 18,678 1,362 777 1,094 1,382 1,149 $1,000: 632,154 483,645 42,156 29,754 25,256 10,836 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 11,397 31 30 133 265 448 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 4,430 44 167 531 793 611 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,046 114 213 268 250 74 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,805 1,173 367 162 74 16 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 5,697 1,323 595 691 632 358 $1,000: 1,043,118 897,364 52,294 36,107 22,314 7,085 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,583 5 21 63 106 124 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,302 41 100 195 227 151 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,427 214 303 360 267 77 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 639 392 130 52 24 5 $250,000 or more ........................................: 746 671 41 21 8 1 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 2,547 525 195 229 241 159 $1,000: 101,956 81,931 6,105 4,281 3,142 1,370 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 452 6 2 9 21 18 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 752 27 25 42 62 71 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 753 114 91 124 134 54 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 256 106 43 40 20 14 $50,000 or more .........................................: 334 272 34 14 4 2 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 5,857 876 457 562 577 448 $1,000: 247,148 198,191 17,198 13,196 8,490 3,150 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 1,290 3 8 25 37 64 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,893 24 48 88 159 147 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,497 149 197 290 296 221 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : : Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 653 1,009 977 871 964 1,339 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 57 57 14 6 8 34 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 5 - - - - - $50,000 or more .........................................: - - - 1 - - : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 546 673 596 472 561 899 $1,000: 2,338 1,429 832 613 476 1,357 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 174 337 399 314 450 667 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 270 277 168 129 92 201 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 95 55 27 28 19 19 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 4 3 2 1 - 10 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3 1 - - - 2 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 78 113 78 66 107 158 $1,000: 67 91 40 29 38 113 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 403 718 824 727 899 1,157 $1,000: 3,071 4,026 2,508 1,796 1,643 3,830 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 208 459 666 656 839 964 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 175 238 154 67 54 172 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 20 20 4 4 6 21 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: - 1 - - - - $250,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 245 355 292 249 284 455 $1,000: 1,795 1,752 806 546 618 1,538 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 216 499 658 583 724 879 $1,000: 1,277 2,275 1,702 1,250 1,025 2,292 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 933 1,410 1,537 1,416 1,735 3,523 $1,000: 8,695 9,613 6,741 4,548 4,822 11,608 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 442 767 1,074 1,123 1,441 2,853 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 417 585 443 282 287 655 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 73 54 19 11 6 11 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 1 4 1 - 1 4 $250,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 1,481 2,243 2,391 2,119 2,642 4,878 $1,000: 5,595 5,002 3,720 2,972 3,138 7,730 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,124 1,983 2,214 2,008 2,527 4,526 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 348 249 174 98 108 326 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 8 5 3 11 5 23 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1 6 - 2 2 3 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 1,202 1,659 1,661 1,423 1,535 2,777 $1,000: 3,826 3,499 2,655 1,925 2,014 5,251 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 268 575 742 771 830 1,300 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 691 929 822 583 636 1,306 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 241 153 97 69 67 154 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 2 2 - - 2 10 $50,000 or more .........................................: - - - - - 7 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 1,379 2,008 2,025 1,766 2,046 3,690 $1,000: 9,064 7,395 5,544 3,779 4,361 10,363 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 744 1,542 1,721 1,585 1,814 3,084 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 572 448 291 173 225 575 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 58 15 13 8 5 28 $50,000 or more .........................................: 5 3 - - 2 3 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 347 398 290 266 264 533 $1,000: 6,041 3,910 3,325 2,062 2,141 10,474 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 166 239 189 176 180 314 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 115 115 74 81 65 138 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 54 43 18 6 16 69 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 12 1 9 3 3 8 $250,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - 4 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 179 177 155 161 161 365 $1,000: 1,109 1,232 452 459 381 1,493 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 41 46 53 59 70 127 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 66 67 83 73 79 157 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 65 52 15 29 9 66 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 7 6 4 - 3 13 $50,000 or more .........................................: - 6 - - - 2 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 405 569 471 407 443 642 $1,000: 1,924 1,720 1,072 635 573 999 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 79 159 152 215 241 307 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 180 306 281 170 187 303 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 140 103 36 21 15 29 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Customwork and custom hauling - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 401 115 117 88 61 10 $50,000 or more .........................................: 776 585 87 71 24 6 : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 5,471 1,080 565 706 748 491 $1,000: 550,451 458,363 35,191 29,536 13,635 4,840 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,036 20 45 100 224 217 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 590 25 41 72 109 100 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 871 71 97 180 240 127 $25,000 or more .........................................: 1,974 964 382 354 175 47 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 1,821 458 169 172 152 102 $1,000: 80,056 64,657 4,888 5,324 2,097 547 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 408 11 13 10 18 22 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 436 29 23 39 27 36 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 516 98 75 66 88 43 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 151 70 25 35 17 1 $50,000 or more .........................................: 310 250 33 22 2 - : Interest expense .......................................farms: 6,805 1,067 533 671 716 457 $1,000: 286,045 211,850 16,631 15,223 12,175 5,169 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,537 67 86 153 229 212 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,688 169 227 319 344 196 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,113 446 189 173 130 45 $100,000 or more ........................................: 467 385 31 26 13 4 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 4,788 694 362 450 498 316 $1,000: 188,811 133,225 11,379 10,328 9,048 4,039 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 429 11 12 19 39 31 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,138 30 48 84 106 85 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 2,184 131 152 225 258 164 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 452 149 83 65 64 27 $50,000 or more .......................................: 585 373 67 57 31 9 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 4,230 780 381 465 452 285 $1,000: 97,234 78,625 5,252 4,894 3,127 1,130 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 780 21 18 46 68 62 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,752 63 93 128 176 179 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 1,098 211 221 249 193 39 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 288 199 41 30 9 5 $50,000 or more .......................................: 312 286 8 12 6 - : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 21,486 1,251 702 973 1,329 1,119 $1,000: 128,588 60,712 7,604 7,085 6,876 4,862 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 17,581 198 247 491 879 930 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,036 186 207 307 325 118 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,125 386 187 137 90 47 $25,000 or more .........................................: 744 481 61 38 35 24 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 9,388 578 321 490 725 629 $1,000: 172,113 153,221 3,821 3,314 3,250 1,527 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,856 71 115 219 455 546 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,128 170 167 261 259 82 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 143 92 34 7 7 1 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 91 76 5 2 4 - $100,000 or more ........................................: 170 169 - 1 - - : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 12,433 1,359 776 1,102 1,252 897 $1,000: 447,370 368,382 24,404 18,254 14,233 4,956 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,586 35 108 250 469 530 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,987 184 276 672 676 346 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 634 185 264 102 58 16 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 642 423 100 66 41 5 $100,000 or more ........................................: 584 532 28 12 8 - : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 867 260 134 89 97 52 $1,000: 36,781 25,802 5,258 2,666 1,857 284 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 15,202 1,362 776 1,086 1,329 1,052 $1,000: 892,639 649,603 60,042 54,737 40,767 17,795 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 $1,000: 2,034,090 1,810,605 152,281 118,025 52,222 17,417 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 88,914 1,329,372 195,734 107,101 36,906 14,183 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 8,958 1,178 647 914 1,037 866 Average net gain .................................dollars: 275,011 1,651,930 283,047 162,216 80,269 40,652 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Customwork and custom hauling - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 5 - 2 - - 3 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1 1 - 1 - - : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 451 447 264 189 173 357 $1,000: 2,856 2,063 628 554 452 2,333 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 279 329 228 161 158 275 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 86 78 26 16 8 29 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 71 33 8 9 5 30 $25,000 or more .........................................: 15 7 2 3 2 23 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 91 110 104 90 112 261 $1,000: 445 368 368 182 200 980 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 29 33 54 45 58 115 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 32 55 28 38 46 83 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 27 22 22 7 8 60 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 3 - - - - - $50,000 or more .........................................: - - - - - 3 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 481 592 508 348 476 956 $1,000: 3,856 3,683 3,714 2,102 2,604 9,040 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 277 348 240 180 285 460 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 179 227 253 164 183 427 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 21 17 15 4 8 65 $100,000 or more ........................................: 4 - - - - 4 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 324 432 398 273 338 703 $1,000: 2,944 2,857 3,142 1,779 2,049 8,021 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 56 69 45 43 40 64 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 116 155 116 80 131 187 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 134 197 224 146 161 392 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 11 7 5 3 5 33 $50,000 or more .......................................: 7 4 8 1 1 27 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 308 327 251 163 253 565 $1,000: 911 826 571 323 555 1,019 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 90 102 94 63 78 138 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 167 188 122 85 156 395 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 50 36 35 15 17 32 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 1 1 - - 2 - $50,000 or more .......................................: - - - - - - : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 1,466 2,236 2,389 2,240 2,767 5,014 $1,000: 4,328 5,860 5,183 4,808 6,571 14,700 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,307 2,009 2,207 2,130 2,613 4,570 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 116 167 160 77 103 270 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 30 52 20 27 39 110 $25,000 or more .........................................: 13 8 2 6 12 64 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 774 1,091 1,046 815 990 1,929 $1,000: 1,359 1,348 1,021 628 802 1,821 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 716 1,058 1,021 803 970 1,882 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 58 32 24 12 20 43 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: - - 1 - - 1 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: - 1 - - - 3 $100,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - - : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 999 1,276 1,131 829 977 1,835 $1,000: 3,550 3,513 2,064 1,413 1,589 5,012 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 740 1,106 1,028 754 902 1,664 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 252 162 103 75 75 166 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 7 2 - - - - $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: - 6 - - - 1 $100,000 or more ........................................: - - - - - 4 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 52 54 26 39 25 39 $1,000: 360 242 59 72 40 141 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 1,179 1,670 1,550 1,247 1,490 2,461 $1,000: 15,879 14,267 10,595 7,291 7,388 14,275 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 $1,000: 4,482 -9,296 -16,152 -15,028 -23,056 -57,410 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,890 -3,926 -6,394 -6,376 -8,025 -10,797 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 962 1,208 897 563 335 351 Average net gain .................................dollars: 23,679 11,851 7,404 8,316 10,002 45,492 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : Farms with net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 625 - - 3 3 9 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,519 2 1 3 43 37 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 841 6 5 14 35 73 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,326 6 10 32 107 208 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,020 33 22 57 193 326 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,627 1,131 609 805 656 213 : Farms with net losses .................................number: 13,919 184 131 188 378 362 Average net loss .................................dollars: 30,854 735,697 235,494 160,855 82,057 49,138 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 848 1 - 7 4 8 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,810 1 1 4 23 39 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,928 1 - 5 18 32 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,582 5 10 27 69 93 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,445 14 10 29 65 68 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,306 162 110 116 199 122 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 $1,000: 1,897,116 1,689,178 143,474 112,410 50,970 17,030 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 82,927 1,240,218 184,414 102,005 36,021 13,868 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 8,919 1,157 636 907 1,033 862 Average net gain .................................dollars: 263,468 1,594,788 276,333 158,405 79,743 40,642 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 636 - - 3 5 7 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,511 - 1 3 42 43 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 846 4 5 15 35 69 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,342 5 19 34 114 209 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 994 19 16 56 194 320 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,590 1,129 595 796 643 214 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 13,958 205 142 195 382 366 Average net loss .................................dollars: 32,437 760,937 227,280 160,324 82,209 49,188 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 843 1 - 6 4 7 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,827 1 3 6 21 40 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,922 1 1 6 18 33 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,574 6 11 29 68 91 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,453 14 9 25 73 72 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,339 182 118 123 198 123 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 39 26 2 3 4 1 $1,000: 5,255 5,091 (D) (D) 34 (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 7,733 849 496 700 793 645 $1,000: 327,387 141,949 31,388 34,352 30,895 14,266 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 1,707 292 163 208 193 159 $1,000: 65,446 33,973 9,157 9,969 4,062 2,408 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 3,629 291 147 190 282 248 $1,000: 116,760 44,822 8,380 11,480 11,828 6,707 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 426 - 12 10 22 23 $1,000: 10,515 - 162 317 1,503 272 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 200 10 5 5 19 20 $1,000: 16,909 340 (D) 40 946 583 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 2,432 584 299 376 394 237 $1,000: 27,917 22,240 2,474 1,372 807 461 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 966 247 126 162 128 63 $1,000: 51,896 32,781 6,901 6,023 3,413 1,007 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 129 17 9 13 16 11 $1,000: 982 151 (D) 293 73 67 Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 870 125 49 66 84 78 $1,000: 36,961 7,641 4,040 4,857 8,264 2,763 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 15,823 1,265 731 1,023 1,280 1,041 acres: 5,623,516 3,310,857 681,383 520,967 394,324 164,342 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 13,037 1,259 728 1,004 1,241 986 acres: 4,370,363 2,894,667 556,439 382,336 256,471 106,942 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 7,454 24 17 52 154 295 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 1,154 11 27 49 196 309 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 1,197 45 55 141 421 252 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 1,342 113 175 512 374 108 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 826 241 264 209 89 21 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: 519 327 148 36 7 1 2,000 acres or more .....................................: 545 498 42 5 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : Farms with net gains 2/ - Con. : : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 21 69 169 168 114 69 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 103 342 474 289 137 88 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 113 346 153 24 14 58 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 402 359 60 40 32 70 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 253 53 20 24 16 23 $50,000 or more .........................................: 70 39 21 18 22 43 : Farms with net losses .................................number: 589 1,160 1,629 1,794 2,538 4,966 Average net loss .................................dollars: 31,065 20,355 13,992 10,987 10,405 14,776 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 28 52 119 164 219 246 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 69 243 455 620 927 1,428 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 101 218 372 410 552 1,219 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 163 372 457 428 607 1,351 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 111 177 156 127 182 506 $50,000 or more .........................................: 117 98 70 45 51 216 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 $1,000: 4,571 -9,150 -16,107 -14,971 -23,018 -57,269 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,947 -3,864 -6,377 -6,352 -8,012 -10,771 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 969 1,208 895 564 335 353 Average net gain .................................dollars: 23,507 11,952 7,429 8,314 10,002 45,235 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 27 73 167 169 114 71 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 104 331 474 288 137 88 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 113 355 153 25 14 58 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 402 357 60 40 32 70 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 253 53 20 24 16 23 $50,000 or more .........................................: 70 39 21 18 22 43 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 582 1,160 1,631 1,793 2,538 4,964 Average net loss .................................dollars: 31,285 20,334 13,952 10,965 10,390 14,754 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 26 52 121 163 219 244 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 62 246 458 621 937 1,432 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 103 217 371 412 543 1,217 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 165 369 455 425 606 1,349 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 110 178 157 127 182 506 $50,000 or more .........................................: 116 98 69 45 51 216 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 3 - - - - - $1,000: 2 - - - - - : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 717 863 537 469 480 1,184 $1,000: 12,274 11,112 7,901 6,227 5,086 31,939 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 184 197 79 69 70 93 $1,000: 2,490 1,622 530 287 485 464 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 339 449 307 305 293 778 $1,000: 6,046 6,460 4,283 3,997 3,538 9,219 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 29 52 50 38 43 147 $1,000: 821 902 1,198 965 600 3,775 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 28 27 18 9 10 49 $1,000: 499 358 797 75 (D) 13,052 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 179 160 57 44 40 62 $1,000: 191 193 38 11 36 94 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 61 72 18 21 27 41 $1,000: 518 556 56 254 37 352 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 14 7 15 14 3 10 $1,000: 60 25 75 21 (D) 92 Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 71 81 61 42 55 158 $1,000: 1,649 995 925 617 320 4,891 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 1,250 1,709 1,592 1,397 1,671 2,864 acres: 162,004 139,294 64,980 38,627 32,727 114,011 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 1,130 1,446 1,284 1,088 1,217 1,654 acres: 69,129 45,495 20,585 13,192 10,781 14,326 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 651 1,169 1,203 1,055 1,203 1,631 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 246 191 70 29 7 19 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 189 71 8 4 7 4 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 42 15 3 - - - 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 2 - - - - - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: - - - - - - 2,000 acres or more .....................................: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 1,737 114 64 124 146 114 acres: 214,761 63,591 21,043 42,369 28,834 12,735 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 983 92 62 59 106 56 acres: 59,462 16,068 7,209 5,762 8,604 2,719 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 3,822 308 150 195 238 167 acres: 660,805 197,246 41,823 34,233 72,992 33,440 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 1,696 248 176 178 228 121 acres: 318,125 139,285 54,869 56,267 27,423 8,506 : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 3,406 91 64 87 164 153 acres: 479,705 42,728 35,564 34,931 78,605 38,600 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 1,561 46 28 50 94 88 acres: 250,428 31,374 27,329 27,152 44,916 29,088 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 2,265 58 44 45 86 74 acres: 229,277 11,354 8,235 7,779 33,689 9,512 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 12,204 363 288 489 759 683 acres: 5,012,618 1,328,612 636,259 776,047 634,518 309,196 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 13,192 723 396 546 792 666 acres: 432,124 148,278 40,196 52,954 57,402 16,585 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 14,191 1,111 610 868 1,095 933 acres: 3,167,499 2,105,412 324,925 274,546 197,889 90,931 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 10,389 1,099 599 831 1,031 833 acres: 2,904,105 2,044,730 302,772 236,432 158,245 68,404 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 6,620 137 125 248 361 362 acres: 263,394 60,682 22,153 38,114 39,644 22,527 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 1,681 158 69 89 103 67 acres: 423,658 103,355 20,435 23,577 56,679 29,698 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 2,599 814 421 421 337 155 acres: 2,933,445 2,058,469 402,177 252,686 111,468 39,454 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 227 57 23 46 42 12 $1,000: 166,224 141,634 9,813 8,553 5,026 632 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 $1,000: 48,610,483 22,023,393 4,429,084 4,730,115 3,579,169 2,033,793 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,124,863 16,169,892 5,692,910 4,292,301 2,529,448 1,656,183 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,209 4,559 3,179 3,415 3,073 3,847 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,300 2 6 4 19 17 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,091 3 5 10 10 27 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 1,951 9 1 8 37 66 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 5,883 20 17 40 156 239 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 5,555 33 35 100 249 309 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 2,930 65 96 248 400 314 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 2,186 190 343 452 374 186 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 969 337 189 148 113 51 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 1,012 703 86 92 57 19 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 22,877 1,362 778 1,102 1,415 1,228 $1,000: 4,930,153 2,572,819 489,801 420,819 316,603 162,958 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 1,609 1 1 2 11 4 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 1,735 - 1 3 7 23 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 2,733 4 2 20 37 68 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 5,105 8 9 50 116 222 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 4,134 8 28 109 275 270 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 3,057 55 82 205 377 368 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 2,429 171 248 397 450 238 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 2,075 1,115 407 316 142 35 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 18,416 1,344 760 1,050 1,341 1,092 number: 54,948 17,850 4,358 4,340 4,365 2,778 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 16,968 1,322 744 1,006 1,275 1,048 number: 42,226 10,639 3,407 3,585 3,909 2,617 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 7,400 360 201 261 358 368 number: 9,283 683 323 345 486 460 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 130 193 189 123 188 352 acres: 11,559 9,841 6,318 1,451 1,789 15,231 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 73 117 86 68 66 198 acres: 4,260 4,564 1,977 734 351 7,214 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 247 387 368 331 437 994 acres: 71,069 71,971 34,464 21,844 16,101 65,622 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 111 133 103 67 81 250 acres: 5,987 7,423 1,636 1,406 3,705 11,618 : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 252 374 377 421 483 940 acres: 33,144 39,924 26,597 20,402 21,023 108,187 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 138 183 164 162 163 445 acres: 15,658 14,183 7,023 6,649 3,764 43,292 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 148 238 277 298 376 621 acres: 17,486 25,741 19,574 13,753 17,259 64,895 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 886 1,325 1,421 1,329 1,520 3,141 acres: 190,379 126,723 62,372 35,561 30,766 882,185 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 877 1,363 1,551 1,426 1,718 3,134 acres: 27,164 17,311 18,579 10,234 11,905 31,516 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 1,014 1,510 1,610 1,407 1,608 2,425 acres: 49,993 41,111 20,373 13,381 10,800 38,138 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 888 1,157 1,018 868 921 1,144 acres: 37,743 24,288 11,282 7,069 5,582 7,558 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 432 767 878 770 933 1,607 acres: 12,250 16,823 9,091 6,312 5,218 30,580 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 151 243 253 218 242 88 acres: 73,422 58,614 29,332 14,029 10,733 3,784 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 122 124 50 55 23 77 acres: 17,056 28,664 3,512 1,661 1,671 16,627 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 13 19 4 11 - - $1,000: 281 237 15 33 - - : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 $1,000: 1,830,342 1,860,151 1,504,904 1,239,482 1,408,652 3,971,397 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 1,180,105 785,537 595,766 525,873 490,307 746,924 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,435 5,754 8,723 11,824 14,609 3,496 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 60 124 193 206 256 413 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 57 127 144 175 190 343 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 98 223 273 278 325 633 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 393 673 817 787 1,000 1,741 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 488 708 728 650 807 1,448 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 269 331 262 181 236 528 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 135 153 96 72 50 135 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 30 20 12 7 9 53 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 21 9 1 1 - 23 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 1,551 2,368 2,526 2,357 2,873 5,317 $1,000: 149,818 165,837 137,531 105,457 118,210 290,298 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 29 97 193 237 402 632 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 58 165 250 316 335 577 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 123 306 374 379 514 906 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 376 635 785 728 830 1,346 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 421 615 525 437 491 955 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 335 374 263 179 219 600 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 195 159 127 76 82 286 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 14 17 9 5 - 15 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 1,314 1,956 2,002 1,729 2,083 3,745 number: 2,877 3,549 3,224 2,647 3,033 5,927 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 1,218 1,827 1,765 1,523 1,828 3,412 number: 2,529 3,232 2,690 2,220 2,506 4,892 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 429 834 885 856 1,072 1,776 number: 541 1,065 1,047 987 1,258 2,088 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT - Con. : : Tractors, all - Con. : : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 9,749 790 422 557 851 686 number: 14,421 2,136 735 960 1,380 1,087 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 6,684 1,254 680 850 963 628 number: 18,522 7,820 2,349 2,280 2,043 1,070 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 2,292 762 391 374 282 146 number: 3,237 1,301 556 501 347 166 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - - number: - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 2,307 319 172 233 318 240 number: 2,680 489 204 266 363 273 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 6,213 629 405 585 740 520 number: 7,569 937 551 750 951 651 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 8,673 1,203 679 880 914 611 acres treated: 3,496,612 2,385,664 445,468 317,542 171,913 68,958 Manure used ..............................................farms: 3,432 351 201 265 289 198 acres treated: 331,595 203,700 42,231 30,787 17,445 10,886 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 497 42 30 36 40 25 acres treated: 55,232 24,416 14,797 7,694 3,642 612 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 2,975 761 361 421 299 192 acres: 1,304,919 1,018,319 125,333 96,427 31,496 17,581 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 8,233 1,171 636 831 840 551 acres: 3,216,414 2,241,419 389,636 272,301 134,363 69,430 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 714 316 84 83 67 23 acres: 311,847 281,862 10,868 11,251 4,888 1,276 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 1,321 471 197 159 109 72 acres: 759,333 628,272 77,783 35,228 10,855 3,457 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 877 385 111 118 70 36 acres on which used: 305,558 273,649 15,160 11,002 3,034 1,147 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 405 85 35 29 22 22 acres: 74,786 47,613 14,148 3,899 2,772 1,581 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 2,229 109 76 103 100 148 acres: 217,276 89,255 35,071 25,196 14,512 18,889 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 427 24 23 23 34 25 acres: 166,621 51,018 23,095 8,927 26,426 10,421 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 1,798 312 172 178 136 124 acres: 641,103 459,173 87,712 39,838 21,008 12,258 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 2,102 491 244 275 242 118 acres: 983,544 676,321 150,606 90,272 40,516 6,811 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 4,226 851 445 542 571 410 acres: 1,842,044 1,314,749 212,385 155,595 81,759 30,127 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 1,326 231 83 106 132 87 acres: 127,777 75,424 13,059 10,874 9,307 3,652 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 2,717 676 415 473 315 162 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 1,682 107 53 54 102 93 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 1,427 77 45 45 79 78 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 99 18 4 6 8 11 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 10 4 - - - 1 Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 191 14 2 4 7 11 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 82 8 4 5 9 4 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 83 14 6 5 8 7 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 17,125 343 222 442 717 760 Part owners ..............................................farms: 4,463 855 459 515 578 332 Tenants ..................................................farms: 1,289 164 97 145 120 136 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 21,665 1,205 682 960 1,301 1,103 acres: 8,813,519 3,087,469 921,038 940,546 949,229 524,486 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 21,588 1,198 681 957 1,295 1,092 acres: 7,737,908 2,874,170 860,424 855,770 833,544 385,381 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 5,829 1,023 559 667 707 471 acres: 3,852,080 1,980,834 536,023 532,731 333,412 144,742 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 5,752 1,019 556 660 698 468 acres: 3,810,055 1,956,305 532,978 529,129 331,305 143,342 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 3,262 287 143 164 240 184 acres: 1,117,636 237,828 63,659 88,378 117,792 140,505 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT - Con. : : Tractors, all - Con. : : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 775 1,139 1,042 788 894 1,805 number: 1,139 1,518 1,295 967 1,033 2,171 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 586 525 285 205 189 519 number: 849 649 348 266 215 633 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 98 85 41 22 23 68 number: 105 98 42 26 23 72 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - - number: - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 207 235 162 103 122 196 number: 224 248 171 106 126 210 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 560 651 489 418 440 776 number: 665 739 549 454 478 844 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 648 795 707 574 631 1,031 acres treated: 37,250 27,566 11,780 6,818 7,951 15,702 Manure used ..............................................farms: 251 345 353 248 324 607 acres treated: 6,384 6,186 3,454 1,914 2,362 6,246 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 43 52 55 49 38 87 acres treated: 1,352 717 599 530 278 595 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 183 169 164 127 131 167 acres: 5,321 2,853 1,578 1,170 560 4,281 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 539 775 709 580 658 943 acres: 32,124 30,436 13,066 8,130 7,760 17,749 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 37 28 24 14 17 21 acres: 544 670 137 60 116 175 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 74 59 59 38 32 51 acres: 2,264 697 340 101 131 205 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 37 33 22 19 19 27 acres on which used: 635 510 114 49 107 151 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 22 29 33 30 38 60 acres: 530 783 752 526 414 1,768 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 145 266 269 252 288 473 acres: 7,251 9,197 6,005 2,851 2,264 6,785 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 32 48 59 22 34 103 acres: 6,962 5,912 8,831 1,464 1,233 22,332 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 130 190 129 108 103 216 acres: 5,396 4,687 1,190 1,361 863 7,617 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 150 152 102 87 87 154 acres: 6,519 6,530 1,501 818 597 3,053 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 318 334 220 138 120 277 acres: 16,730 12,272 4,315 1,708 3,675 8,729 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 98 157 88 67 98 179 acres: 3,127 2,899 2,400 418 509 6,108 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 146 133 108 64 57 168 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 95 203 197 176 233 369 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 83 178 176 152 210 304 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 11 16 3 4 3 15 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 2 - - - 3 - Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 9 16 25 21 23 59 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 9 8 8 7 3 17 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 8 14 4 - 4 13 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 1,057 1,863 2,191 2,121 2,607 4,802 Part owners ..............................................farms: 398 383 255 167 187 334 Tenants ..................................................farms: 96 122 80 69 79 181 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 1,470 2,250 2,448 2,291 2,806 5,149 acres: 394,233 330,157 208,473 139,516 115,158 1,203,214 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 1,455 2,246 2,446 2,288 2,794 5,136 acres: 316,741 244,694 149,693 96,383 83,525 1,037,583 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 499 512 340 241 270 540 acres: 96,589 81,463 23,411 8,549 13,030 101,296 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 494 505 335 236 266 515 acres: 95,950 78,558 22,835 8,441 12,896 98,316 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 300 392 289 266 301 696 acres: 78,131 88,368 59,356 43,241 31,767 168,611 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 44,714 3,387 1,589 2,076 2,817 2,380 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 6,958 375 240 394 474 403 2 producers ...............................................: 12,840 483 354 529 677 644 3 producers ...............................................: 1,621 236 120 108 140 96 4 producers ...............................................: 910 174 47 59 79 55 5 or more producers .......................................: 548 94 17 12 45 30 : Total male producers ........................................: 27,035 2,533 1,148 1,418 1,841 1,487 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 17,639 690 499 808 1,031 984 2 producers .............................................: 2,533 348 175 211 255 154 3 producers .............................................: 838 192 78 42 70 36 4 producers .............................................: 193 80 12 14 6 5 5 or more producers .....................................: 173 37 3 1 13 12 : Total female producers ......................................: 17,679 854 441 658 976 893 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 14,310 574 353 535 713 714 2 producers .............................................: 1,105 85 39 56 112 66 3 producers .............................................: 163 18 2 1 9 11 4 producers .............................................: 83 11 1 2 3 1 5 or more producers .....................................: 58 1 - - - 2 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 26,384 2,374 1,137 1,410 1,805 1,449 Female ......................................................: 16,949 747 427 650 939 870 : Hired managers ................................................: 3,382 1,499 458 423 319 143 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 17,793 2,584 1,168 1,466 1,664 1,213 Other .......................................................: 25,540 537 396 594 1,080 1,106 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 33,141 2,188 1,165 1,518 1,988 1,664 Not on farm operated ........................................: 10,192 933 399 542 756 655 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 16,151 2,076 859 1,064 1,255 854 Any .........................................................: 27,182 1,045 705 996 1,489 1,465 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 4,566 245 192 220 290 234 50 to 99 days .............................................: 2,032 87 65 159 140 143 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 3,482 89 86 135 238 231 200 days or more ..........................................: 17,102 624 362 482 821 857 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 2,561 60 63 135 132 125 3 or 4 years ................................................: 4,392 178 53 146 180 190 5 to 9 years ................................................: 9,426 327 252 422 457 429 10 years or more ............................................: 26,954 2,556 1,196 1,357 1,975 1,575 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 19.0 25.5 24.6 22.2 24.4 21.4 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 7,099 206 122 243 281 297 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 7,699 260 192 277 326 327 11 years or more ............................................: 28,535 2,655 1,250 1,540 2,137 1,695 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 21.7 28.4 27.3 25.7 28.2 25.0 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 832 37 31 42 42 48 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 3,027 324 151 230 231 243 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 6,911 615 300 395 392 315 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 7,320 534 304 320 416 372 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 10,123 766 356 468 622 503 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 10,095 628 289 390 656 530 75 years and over ...........................................: 5,025 217 133 215 385 308 : Average age .................................................: 56.6 54.0 53.7 54.2 57.3 56.5 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 3,859 361 182 272 273 291 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 1,341 101 29 75 66 54 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 290 4 8 11 24 33 Asian .......................................................: 144 21 5 9 3 4 Black or African American ...................................: 19 - - - 2 1 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 42 4 - - 5 2 White .......................................................: 42,509 3,083 1,550 2,027 2,702 2,263 More than one race reported .................................: 329 9 1 13 8 16 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 39,671 3,032 1,510 1,950 2,583 2,198 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 3,662 89 54 110 161 121 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 86,167 8,325 3,709 4,755 5,842 4,580 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 3,146 4,552 4,823 4,535 5,341 10,068 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 456 715 721 657 838 1,685 2 producers ...............................................: 839 1,362 1,558 1,491 1,795 3,108 3 producers ...............................................: 120 147 140 108 131 275 4 producers ...............................................: 82 102 63 48 70 131 5 or more producers .......................................: 54 42 44 53 39 118 : Total male producers ........................................: 1,911 2,624 2,746 2,556 3,004 5,767 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 1,152 1,909 2,021 1,938 2,380 4,227 2 producers .............................................: 225 213 215 146 177 414 3 producers .............................................: 50 72 67 55 70 106 4 producers .............................................: 4 8 4 11 8 41 5 or more producers .....................................: 28 8 12 19 4 36 : Total female producers ......................................: 1,235 1,928 2,077 1,979 2,337 4,301 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 911 1,516 1,745 1,673 1,975 3,601 2 producers .............................................: 91 157 80 92 121 206 3 producers .............................................: 24 18 19 2 24 35 4 producers .............................................: 16 7 13 10 12 7 5 or more producers .....................................: 1 3 9 13 - 29 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 1,858 2,589 2,696 2,477 2,979 5,610 Female ......................................................: 1,180 1,867 1,989 1,890 2,278 4,112 : Hired managers ................................................: 128 79 93 67 27 146 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 1,336 1,713 1,483 1,262 1,341 2,563 Other .......................................................: 1,702 2,743 3,202 3,105 3,916 7,159 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 2,127 3,351 3,797 3,557 4,359 7,427 Not on farm operated ........................................: 911 1,105 888 810 898 2,295 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 972 1,521 1,427 1,449 1,553 3,121 Any .........................................................: 2,066 2,935 3,258 2,918 3,704 6,601 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 306 447 486 337 634 1,175 50 to 99 days .............................................: 195 225 212 154 247 405 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 308 500 418 399 378 700 200 days or more ..........................................: 1,257 1,763 2,142 2,028 2,445 4,321 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 187 216 228 263 296 856 3 or 4 years ................................................: 332 447 591 583 653 1,039 5 to 9 years ................................................: 663 965 1,200 1,174 1,493 2,044 10 years or more ............................................: 1,856 2,828 2,666 2,347 2,815 5,783 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 20.3 18.9 16.6 16.3 15.6 17.2 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 505 657 849 954 1,057 1,928 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 531 744 1,021 932 1,288 1,801 11 years or more ............................................: 2,002 3,055 2,815 2,481 2,912 5,993 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 22.9 22.3 19.3 18.7 17.5 19.5 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 83 83 70 95 115 186 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 240 279 273 237 268 551 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 452 601 777 698 970 1,396 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 473 692 818 777 951 1,663 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 674 1,086 1,135 985 1,260 2,268 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 717 1,171 1,046 1,106 1,177 2,385 75 years and over ...........................................: 399 544 566 469 516 1,273 : Average age .................................................: 56.9 57.9 57.0 56.8 56.0 57.7 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 323 362 343 332 383 737 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 91 152 190 138 165 280 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 14 52 21 26 19 78 Asian .......................................................: 17 14 13 30 11 17 Black or African American ...................................: - 3 1 3 2 7 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 7 5 2 4 9 4 White .......................................................: 2,987 4,340 4,593 4,263 5,160 9,541 More than one race reported .................................: 13 42 55 41 56 75 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 2,784 4,088 4,272 3,885 4,656 8,713 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 254 368 413 482 601 1,009 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 6,027 8,379 8,773 8,255 9,780 17,742 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ - Con. : : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 37,172 2,696 1,378 1,752 2,302 1,987 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 32,598 2,407 1,228 1,608 2,099 1,773 Livestock decisions .........................................: 26,379 1,364 738 986 1,577 1,409 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 25,823 2,246 1,235 1,536 1,963 1,602 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 30,863 2,428 1,253 1,628 2,051 1,806 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 23,727 2,062 949 1,278 1,631 1,441 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 21,570 1,141 674 967 1,260 1,155 acres: 9,774,644 4,007,125 1,203,481 1,150,254 1,002,199 464,269 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 3,390 436 197 299 293 244 acres: 2,655,263 1,343,683 396,364 301,016 199,415 81,096 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 18,427 443 402 637 970 1,002 acres: 4,611,219 1,147,841 562,519 759,242 711,394 345,594 Partnership ..............................................farms: 1,752 414 140 177 181 98 acres: 2,798,624 1,857,637 355,597 181,344 165,963 57,629 Registered under State law .............................farms: 1,562 395 130 167 171 86 acres: 2,678,784 1,800,853 327,354 174,226 160,531 53,227 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 2,145 487 227 262 215 114 acres: 3,033,242 (D) 456,646 348,404 197,002 97,949 Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 440 201 228 190 99 acres: 2,758,073 1,543,745 443,446 305,629 140,027 88,939 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 35 6 1 3 - 4 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 1,848 434 200 225 190 95 : Other than family held .................................farms: 262 47 26 34 25 15 acres: 275,169 (D) 13,200 42,775 56,975 9,010 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 32 10 1 7 - 4 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 230 37 25 27 25 11 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 553 18 9 26 49 14 acres: 1,104,878 (D) 18,640 95,909 90,490 27,551 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 5,697 1,323 595 691 632 358 workers: 42,990 28,590 3,133 2,671 2,402 964 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 3,478 1,240 486 440 361 167 workers: 21,741 16,152 1,675 1,223 871 290 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 3,988 860 378 460 449 267 workers: 21,249 12,438 1,458 1,448 1,531 674 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 714 492 98 61 26 9 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 32 8 1 7 1 2 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 8,421 149 208 335 532 425 workers: 21,358 317 471 861 1,452 1,141 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 5,785 20 18 19 44 60 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 6,977 35 10 28 80 198 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 881 6 3 8 22 81 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 1,133 10 15 19 96 155 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 960 20 13 21 108 129 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 927 16 17 52 148 122 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 517 7 23 37 99 50 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 432 11 9 74 66 46 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 1,566 81 110 309 235 149 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 1,384 196 207 224 210 114 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 1,048 299 182 152 165 81 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 1,267 661 171 159 142 43 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 1,681 298 247 311 256 167 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 767 249 66 64 42 23 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 401 3 1 5 7 22 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 555 27 34 28 56 34 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 7,395 372 249 357 483 444 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 7,395 372 249 357 483 444 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 6,883 111 119 273 494 432 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 132 24 7 14 16 24 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 334 229 24 19 12 - Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 179 2 2 2 - 6 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 601 6 - 3 2 - Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 1,092 13 7 6 3 8 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 2,857 28 22 20 44 68 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ - Con. : : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 2,541 3,796 4,134 3,790 4,557 8,239 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 2,286 3,298 3,526 3,270 3,924 7,179 Livestock decisions .........................................: 1,858 2,793 3,073 2,824 3,376 6,381 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 1,957 2,712 2,790 2,364 2,759 4,659 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 2,210 3,159 3,422 2,966 3,557 6,383 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 1,601 2,396 2,387 2,242 2,631 5,109 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 1,465 2,281 2,442 2,281 2,822 5,082 acres: 365,769 310,725 141,475 100,320 85,372 943,655 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 314 326 302 228 264 487 acres: 84,115 51,058 31,614 19,948 18,164 128,790 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 1,239 2,043 2,242 2,142 2,667 4,640 acres: 269,467 238,748 121,501 79,769 76,403 298,741 Partnership ..............................................farms: 145 116 114 88 72 207 acres: (D) 33,402 18,711 12,443 (D) 46,538 Registered under State law .............................farms: 133 100 103 74 49 154 acres: 61,257 30,696 16,106 11,658 2,935 39,941 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 129 141 98 91 86 295 acres: 61,915 30,674 18,399 (D) (D) 123,592 Family held ............................................farms: 116 117 90 59 80 263 acres: (D) 27,897 18,365 (D) (D) 115,148 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 2 - - 2 8 9 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 114 117 90 57 72 254 : Other than family held .................................farms: 13 24 8 32 6 32 acres: (D) 2,777 34 (D) 135 8,444 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 1 3 - 6 - - 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 12 21 8 26 6 32 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 38 68 72 36 48 175 acres: (D) 20,428 13,917 (D) (D) 667,028 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 347 398 290 266 264 533 workers: 939 1,053 689 724 655 1,170 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 154 127 106 82 84 231 workers: 306 226 189 153 174 482 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 267 311 227 216 200 353 workers: 633 827 500 571 481 688 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 13 5 - - 2 8 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 1 4 1 - 5 2 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 602 1,033 1,069 955 1,198 1,915 workers: 1,669 2,557 2,728 2,484 2,914 4,764 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 166 426 871 912 1,339 1,910 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 418 947 1,016 968 1,141 2,136 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 118 174 97 86 114 172 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 145 152 124 145 102 170 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 110 109 105 100 38 207 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 89 101 93 45 50 194 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 54 61 60 20 12 94 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 61 40 26 19 16 64 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 160 197 83 41 30 171 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 165 104 28 12 27 97 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 39 50 18 8 3 51 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 26 7 5 1 1 51 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 148 126 58 40 16 14 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 38 77 99 49 40 20 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 35 78 75 55 53 67 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 74 86 66 38 38 74 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 555 820 859 849 1,078 1,329 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 555 820 859 849 1,078 1,329 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 538 853 907 849 739 1,568 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 23 21 2 1 - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 2 9 2 1 - 36 Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 4 8 33 54 58 10 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 6 12 41 127 392 12 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 28 82 127 153 285 380 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 100 196 257 141 174 1,807 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 17,963 - 7 - 506 1,115 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 1,235 1 6 440 719 38 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 1,207 17 627 526 31 1 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 875 833 34 1 4 1 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 290 290 - - - - Non-family farms ............................................: 1,307 221 104 135 155 73 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 19,417 1,308 722 1,016 1,252 1,057 Dial-up ...................................................: 537 53 10 33 39 26 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 10,022 801 386 563 658 529 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 12,438 985 526 712 825 719 Satellite .................................................: 5,457 373 196 264 314 284 Don't know ................................................: 905 30 28 33 64 57 Other .....................................................: 304 11 8 9 18 24 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 18,831 840 512 810 1,058 993 2 households ................................................: 2,888 304 173 196 269 188 3 households ................................................: 661 108 79 64 57 30 4 households ................................................: 291 68 11 26 16 11 5 or more households ........................................: 206 42 3 6 15 6 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 8,956 552 298 474 750 678 number: 2,517,987 2,010,408 128,214 125,739 111,482 49,513 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 3,651 7 12 12 37 48 10 to 49 ..................................................: 2,769 36 36 52 105 214 50 to 99 ..................................................: 770 25 21 50 131 251 100 to 199 ................................................: 606 26 53 94 257 135 200 to 499 ................................................: 607 78 67 208 215 30 500 or more ...............................................: 553 380 109 58 5 - : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 7,712 502 282 439 713 635 number: 1,113,728 803,261 73,577 80,299 70,812 31,499 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 7,379 312 259 429 697 633 number: 449,249 144,627 70,031 78,977 70,293 31,465 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 3,402 10 14 19 34 57 10 to 49 ..............................................: 2,343 74 43 75 155 302 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 28 33 49 182 214 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 49 46 94 261 56 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 62 65 179 64 4 500 or more ...........................................: 161 89 58 13 1 - : Milk cows ............................................farms: 549 232 28 21 28 12 number: 664,479 658,634 3,546 1,322 519 34 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 259 3 1 2 14 12 10 to 49 ..............................................: 21 - 1 8 11 - 50 to 99 ..............................................: 17 - 8 6 3 - 100 to 199 ............................................: 27 8 14 5 - - 200 to 499 ............................................: 58 54 4 - - - 500 or more ...........................................: 167 167 - - - - : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 6,745 531 280 457 725 638 number: 1,404,259 1,207,147 54,637 45,440 40,670 18,014 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 7,630 560 307 483 777 692 number: 1,835,062 1,501,851 83,985 92,741 75,486 33,231 $1,000: 2,175,548 1,839,381 88,137 96,422 76,182 31,498 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 2,533 304 125 173 276 229 number: 485,342 427,977 12,028 16,393 12,150 5,912 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 7,198 555 297 477 775 679 number: 1,349,720 1,073,874 71,957 76,348 63,336 27,319 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 228 71 18 24 37 28 number: 492,887 482,808 3,189 2,631 2,093 1,215 : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 562 12 9 5 10 20 number: 21,157 12,123 (D) (D) 334 1,739 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 517 4 5 3 7 9 25 to 49 ..................................................: 20 - 2 - 2 2 50 to 99 ..................................................: 5 2 - - - - 100 to 199 ................................................: 6 - - - - 6 200 to 499 ................................................: 9 4 - 1 1 3 500 or more ...............................................: 5 2 2 1 - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 663 15 7 5 19 29 number: 100,260 (D) 8,656 (D) 1,291 (D) $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) (D) 157 (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 1,208 36 18 29 38 40 number: 230,681 171,552 20,848 11,106 2,549 3,180 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 1,459 2,278 2,434 2,279 2,821 5,064 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 6 3 8 2 1 11 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: - - - - - 5 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: - - - - - 2 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: - - - - - - Non-family farms ............................................: 86 87 84 76 51 235 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 1,319 2,000 2,155 1,889 2,431 4,268 Dial-up ...................................................: 28 61 60 51 59 117 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 696 965 1,126 1,051 1,226 2,021 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 830 1,272 1,342 1,174 1,469 2,584 Satellite .................................................: 327 601 647 517 739 1,195 Don't know ................................................: 73 95 76 77 107 265 Other .....................................................: 17 36 43 20 35 83 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 1,236 2,004 2,160 2,076 2,545 4,597 2 households ................................................: 225 259 266 200 248 560 3 households ................................................: 49 69 47 43 31 84 4 households ................................................: 9 25 47 18 19 41 5 or more households ........................................: 32 11 6 20 30 35 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 778 1,082 924 846 827 1,747 number: 32,408 23,667 10,179 6,936 5,099 14,342 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 90 301 531 622 674 1,317 10 to 49 ..................................................: 453 703 381 217 152 420 50 to 99 ..................................................: 200 70 9 7 - 6 100 to 199 ................................................: 31 6 2 - 1 1 200 to 499 ................................................: 4 2 1 - - 2 500 or more ...............................................: - - - - - 1 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 709 948 772 664 676 1,372 number: 19,837 14,289 6,218 3,852 2,846 7,238 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 702 939 761 642 657 1,348 number: 19,795 14,204 6,149 3,766 2,785 7,157 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 115 349 530 529 607 1,138 10 to 49 ..............................................: 514 580 230 111 50 209 50 to 99 ..............................................: 65 7 - 2 - 1 100 to 199 ............................................: 8 2 1 - - - 200 to 499 ............................................: - 1 - - - - 500 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Milk cows ............................................farms: 21 47 37 40 35 48 number: 42 85 69 86 61 81 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 21 47 37 40 34 48 10 to 49 ..............................................: - - - - 1 - 50 to 99 ..............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 199 ............................................: - - - - - - 200 to 499 ............................................: - - - - - - 500 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 687 817 589 549 498 974 number: 12,571 9,378 3,961 3,084 2,253 7,104 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 789 1,155 1,067 917 768 115 number: 20,847 15,323 6,371 3,357 1,700 170 $1,000: 19,817 13,651 6,148 2,974 1,266 74 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 286 365 281 228 200 66 number: 4,661 3,504 1,359 778 482 98 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 754 1,098 1,005 843 654 61 number: 16,186 11,819 5,012 2,579 1,218 72 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 26 21 2 1 - - number: 604 319 (D) (D) - - : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 26 63 104 90 107 116 number: 345 453 1,005 666 569 500 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 21 59 98 88 107 116 25 to 49 ..................................................: 2 4 6 2 - - 50 to 99 ..................................................: 3 - - - - - 100 to 199 ................................................: - - - - - - 200 to 499 ................................................: - - - - - - 500 or more ...............................................: - - - - - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 31 79 149 137 140 52 number: 728 1,510 1,828 1,207 688 185 $1,000: 166 273 349 232 134 26 : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 64 117 154 150 216 346 number: 3,556 3,860 4,294 2,644 2,807 4,285 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 840 33 14 20 33 18 number: 198,506 156,346 18,000 6,082 3,236 2,039 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 6,660 175 151 260 411 362 number: 41,412 2,112 1,433 2,008 3,137 3,201 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 989 30 26 24 61 91 number: 3,200 487 97 108 317 503 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 1,474 8 9 13 22 38 number: 24,780 271 498 4,899 1,176 1,789 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 702 9 5 8 12 15 number: 11,265 259 270 2,101 501 525 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 3,514 24 18 24 64 78 number: 638,424 569,632 169 1,130 4,679 1,271 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 3,500 16 18 24 61 78 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 9 3 - - 3 - 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: 1 1 - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 2 2 - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: 2 2 - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 447 5 - 2 9 15 number: (D) (D) - (D) 629 276 : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 358 6 2 2 5 6 number: (D) (D) (D) (D) 186 380 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 43 1 - - - 2 number: (D) (D) - - - (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 155 1 1 1 1 5 number: 11,815 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1,092 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 155 1 1 1 1 5 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 297 4 - - 9 8 number: 4,644 902 - - (D) (D) Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 95 3 - - 2 8 number: 4,156 900 - - (D) (D) : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 1,322 450 252 217 186 87 acres: 538,586 373,681 88,918 43,569 21,892 6,243 bushels: 50,782,418 37,685,072 7,023,531 3,730,333 1,561,417 492,255 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,013 343 179 178 144 68 acres: 348,967 254,275 47,249 30,253 10,937 3,975 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 146 5 2 13 34 23 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 322 34 49 67 80 38 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 323 85 70 90 48 23 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 243 114 84 28 16 1 500 acres or more .........................................: 288 212 47 19 8 2 : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 648 230 88 108 83 42 acres: 126,508 95,346 12,319 11,714 4,639 1,310 bushels: 22,937,258 17,460,903 2,244,213 2,032,485 795,113 200,563 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 648 230 88 108 83 42 acres: 126,508 95,346 12,319 11,714 4,639 1,310 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 147 8 14 7 13 27 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 216 49 30 47 59 12 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 153 65 30 45 10 3 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 77 57 11 8 1 - 500 acres or more .........................................: 55 51 3 1 - - : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 772 397 115 113 65 39 acres: 258,326 228,003 15,401 9,448 3,261 1,581 tons: 7,412,427 6,529,668 458,390 273,948 87,046 47,936 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 770 397 115 111 65 39 acres: (D) 228,003 15,401 (D) 3,261 1,581 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 97 4 7 25 15 11 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 238 61 47 53 41 28 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 210 126 45 30 9 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 97 76 16 5 - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 130 130 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 227 96 48 35 27 9 acres: 35,063 26,398 4,845 2,296 1,069 285 cwt: 868,671 662,311 108,768 57,853 27,114 8,276 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 213 90 40 35 27 9 acres: 31,511 24,491 3,200 2,296 1,069 285 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 37 1 5 7 9 4 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 92 26 23 20 17 5 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 62 35 18 8 1 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 47 96 152 141 193 93 number: 3,255 2,943 2,918 1,846 1,522 319 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 486 731 618 547 752 2,167 number: 3,282 4,261 3,298 2,375 3,298 13,007 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 106 211 191 107 128 14 number: 452 526 300 184 212 14 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 58 147 179 232 320 448 number: 1,287 2,855 2,663 2,705 2,683 3,954 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 31 111 122 158 184 47 number: 920 2,146 1,699 1,441 1,282 121 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 161 359 553 547 786 900 number: 5,692 8,172 12,157 11,986 14,684 8,852 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 158 359 553 547 786 900 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 3 - - - - - 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 29 57 80 86 80 84 number: 642 816 1,219 1,221 1,291 690 : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 15 57 71 64 95 35 number: 1,407 4,245 1,931 1,041 2,145 211 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 1 7 7 9 10 6 number: (D) 169 274 182 755 30 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 14 24 22 24 23 39 number: 1,360 3,694 1,418 1,036 1,444 446 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 14 24 22 24 23 39 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 19 23 62 37 67 68 number: 104 267 486 153 398 200 Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 7 12 24 7 24 8 number: 139 (D) 302 46 221 14 : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 45 40 18 12 7 8 acres: 1,720 1,819 568 98 28 50 bushels: 148,787 112,928 20,110 5,874 1,636 475 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 36 30 11 10 6 8 acres: 1,201 749 212 (D) (D) 50 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 14 18 12 10 7 8 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 30 16 6 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1 6 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 44 24 12 7 10 - acres: 898 186 45 18 33 - bushels: 161,523 32,519 5,451 1,776 2,712 - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 44 24 12 7 10 - acres: 898 186 45 18 33 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 27 23 11 7 10 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 17 1 1 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 16 18 4 5 - - acres: 345 255 17 15 - - tons: 7,578 7,061 440 360 - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 16 18 4 5 - - acres: 345 255 17 15 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 9 17 4 5 - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 7 1 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 5 5 2 - - - acres: 94 (D) (D) - - - cwt: 2,706 (D) (D) - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 5 2 - - - acres: 94 (D) (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 5 2 - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 1 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 22 21 1 - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 14 13 1 - - - : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 115 33 19 18 15 8 acres: 11,088 4,412 3,181 1,408 878 232 bushels: 704,503 308,763 168,630 94,637 78,559 12,163 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 41 14 7 9 6 3 acres: 4,324 1,782 1,306 552 489 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 22 5 3 - 1 2 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 60 14 10 13 11 6 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 27 10 4 5 3 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 3 3 - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 3 1 2 - - - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 5 1 - 4 - - acres: 485 (D) - (D) - - bushels: 52,100 (D) - (D) - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 - - 4 - - acres: (D) - - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 4 - - 4 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 1 - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 8 - 1 3 1 - acres: 304 - (D) (D) (D) - bushels: 9,092 - (D) (D) (D) - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 - 1 3 1 - acres: 205 - (D) (D) (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 8 - 1 3 1 - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 452 246 79 68 37 15 acres: 178,358 152,973 15,854 6,969 2,168 315 tons: 6,570,132 5,688,533 544,956 241,256 81,434 11,259 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 452 246 79 68 37 15 acres: 178,358 152,973 15,854 6,969 2,168 315 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: 10 4 - 6 - - acres: 938 777 - 161 - - pounds: 1,500,019 1,136,019 - 364,000 - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 9 3 - 6 - - acres: (D) (D) - 161 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 - - 4 - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 3 1 - 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 2 2 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 1 - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 2,210 742 362 394 306 142 acres: 1,162,597 829,341 172,421 96,621 42,102 10,591 bushels: 93,723,621 70,638,888 11,999,143 6,841,553 2,986,689 728,428 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,318 461 206 239 182 95 acres: 448,708 354,439 44,506 27,708 15,043 4,221 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 256 5 9 39 38 33 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 539 47 83 110 119 80 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 480 128 78 126 101 19 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 317 142 52 70 40 9 500 acres or more .........................................: 618 420 140 49 8 1 : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 10,279 921 515 730 964 774 acres: 1,415,865 654,121 188,640 179,158 166,800 79,036 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 3,090,332 684,477 647,456 453,030 199,124 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 8,042 810 446 624 814 666 acres: 1,102,400 559,694 147,816 138,349 117,966 55,123 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4,884 32 18 31 52 97 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 2,460 100 77 140 294 394 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1,560 209 154 300 428 222 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 703 172 148 172 145 49 500 acres or more .........................................: 672 408 118 87 45 12 : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 7,480 836 462 651 848 648 acres: 1,047,568 499,771 147,823 132,042 125,772 56,671 tons, dry: 3,926,331 2,185,492 533,058 500,361 355,398 152,861 Irrigated ............................................farms: 6,466 741 410 573 728 578 acres: 870,101 440,584 117,638 110,458 95,963 43,385 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 3,303 218 164 229 295 241 acres: 251,158 81,838 30,423 40,146 31,268 18,613 tons, dry: 582,333 232,363 78,286 102,341 62,604 34,128 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 8 9 2 - 3 - acres: 650 273 (D) - (D) - bushels: 31,494 7,253 (D) - (D) - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - 2 - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 2 4 2 - 3 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 1 5 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 5 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: - 3 - - - - acres: - 99 - - - - bushels: - 4,867 - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - 3 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 4 1 2 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - tons: 2,346 (D) (D) - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 1 2 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 107 76 42 24 3 12 acres: 7,623 2,378 867 584 9 60 bushels: 347,705 124,704 35,488 11,624 1,125 8,274 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 51 40 25 10 3 6 acres: 1,479 731 482 36 9 54 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 33 44 30 10 3 12 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 44 30 12 14 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 26 2 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 4 - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 863 1,103 981 900 1,065 1,463 acres: 55,580 37,484 18,612 12,216 10,483 13,735 tons, dry equivalent: 127,091 78,711 32,909 19,109 13,555 15,326 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 666 835 722 697 771 991 acres: 32,546 21,516 10,109 6,751 5,341 7,189 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 176 585 747 769 991 1,386 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 516 449 223 127 67 73 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 155 67 10 4 7 4 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 14 2 1 - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 2 - - - - - : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 697 811 662 577 593 695 acres: 36,220 21,565 10,083 6,693 4,991 5,937 tons, dry: 92,268 55,544 22,493 12,728 7,799 8,329 Irrigated ............................................farms: 591 687 555 511 509 583 acres: 25,891 15,933 7,300 4,958 3,547 4,444 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 280 357 321 284 362 552 acres: 15,432 13,994 6,933 4,442 3,315 4,754 tons, dry: 27,774 20,947 8,810 5,500 4,230 5,350 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : $1,000,000 or : $500,000 to : $250,000 to : $100,000 to : $50,000 to Item : All farms : more : $999,999 : $499,999 : $249,999 : $99,999 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop - Con. : Other dry hay - Con. : : Irrigated ............................................farms: 1,993 149 119 158 207 164 acres: 131,135 47,084 20,226 21,411 16,512 9,233 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 187 75 37 15 22 9 acres: 56,098 31,321 12,664 2,931 6,150 791 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 79 36 14 10 6 2 acres: 14,585 11,662 2,079 463 206 (D) : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 1,235 404 123 123 67 45 acres: 334,276 317,536 8,333 6,048 1,381 388 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,232 404 123 123 67 45 acres: 334,263 317,536 8,333 6,048 1,381 387 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 527 6 8 6 19 29 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 126 6 24 43 29 12 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 194 47 63 60 18 4 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 132 89 28 14 1 - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 256 256 - - - - : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 195 14 22 17 12 14 acres: 5,237 3,372 1,012 616 26 95 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 1 2 8 - - acres: 767 (D) (D) 257 - - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 105 11 8 14 13 7 acres: 1,972 1,026 238 651 22 27 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 4 1 - 2 - - acres: 190 (D) - (D) - - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 529 286 62 43 36 17 acres: 301,157 292,993 5,185 2,096 844 25 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 220 174 20 12 10 - acres: 139,548 136,586 2,037 (D) 500 - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 118 - - 4 14 15 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: 20 - 6 6 6 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 90 6 37 32 15 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 78 57 19 1 1 - 250.0 acres or more .....................................: 223 223 - - - - : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 221 25 19 26 8 9 acres: 3,282 1,550 723 632 214 27 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 1 - 2 2 - acres: 344 (D) - (D) (D) - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 10 - - - - - acres: 1 - - - - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 215 - 1 3 13 13 acres: 62 - (D) 9 11 3 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 16 - - - - - acres: 3 - - - - - : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 567 13 1 9 13 22 acres: 5,523 3,670 (D) 518 305 257 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 565 13 1 9 13 22 acres: (D) 3,670 (D) 518 305 257 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 495 8 1 3 4 9 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 57 2 - 1 6 10 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 10 - - 4 2 3 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 - - - 1 - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 4 3 - 1 - - : Apples .................................................farms: 320 4 1 5 9 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,936 (D) (D) (D) 48 14 : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 137 9 - 5 3 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,175 (D) - 124 (D) 143 : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 132 2 1 3 8 7 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,009 (D) (D) (D) 53 30 : Almonds ................................................farms: 8 - - - 1 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 2 - - - (D) - : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 22 1 - - - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 19 (D) - - - - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 268 - 4 2 8 16 acres: 207 - (D) (D) (D) 52 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 73. Summary by Combined Government Payments and Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : $25,000 to : $10,000 to : $5,000 to : $2,500 to : $1,000 to : Less than Item : $49,999 : $24,999 : $9,999 : $4,999 : $2,499 : $1,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop - Con. : Other dry hay - Con. : : Irrigated ............................................farms: 150 188 172 162 207 317 acres: 5,195 4,822 2,136 1,406 1,234 1,876 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 7 12 3 7 - - acres: 204 2,000 (D) (D) - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 6 3 - 2 - - acres: (D) 56 - (D) - - : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 72 134 126 68 47 26 acres: 224 186 83 47 31 18 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 72 133 124 68 47 26 acres: 221 (D) (D) 46 30 18 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 64 128 126 68 47 26 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 6 6 - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 2 - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: - - - - - - : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 17 43 30 11 4 11 acres: 94 10 10 1 (Z) 1 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 6 1 1 - - - acres: 89 (D) (D) - - - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 9 25 6 6 - 6 acres: 1 (D) (D) 1 - 3 Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - 1 - - - acres: - - (D) - - - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 12 38 10 9 11 5 acres: 3 6 1 1 3 1 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 1 3 - - - - acres: (D) (Z) - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 12 38 10 9 11 5 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .....................................: - - - - - - : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 18 49 28 19 13 7 acres: 61 49 17 5 3 1 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 7 5 2 - - - acres: 24 18 (D) - - - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 1 3 2 4 - - acres: (D) (D) (D) (Z) - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 27 58 39 26 20 15 acres: 9 10 5 5 (D) 2 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 2 3 5 - 2 4 acres: (D) (D) 1 - (D) (Z) : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 55 116 120 62 69 87 acres: 162 239 122 54 (D) 142 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 55 116 120 62 69 85 acres: 162 238 122 54 (D) 133 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 38 101 117 61 69 84 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 17 15 3 1 - 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: - - - - - 1 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: - - - - - - : Apples .................................................farms: 29 78 76 26 38 46 bearing and nonbearing acres: 48 106 39 8 20 19 : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 21 28 21 22 8 12 bearing and nonbearing acres: 68 50 18 25 3 42 : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 9 26 29 15 20 12 bearing and nonbearing acres: 9 20 8 6 8 (D) : Almonds ................................................farms: 2 3 - 2 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) 1 - (D) - - : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 1 7 3 3 3 4 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) (D) (Z) 1 (Z) 1 : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 30 59 63 40 20 26 acres: 25 52 20 20 7 6 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included with total farm production expenses. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. 3/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 percent: 100.0 80.5 7.7 6.8 Land in farms ............................................acres: 11,547,963 4,611,219 2,798,624 2,678,784 Average size of farm .................................acres: 505 250 1,597 1,715 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 $1,000: 11,024,607 3,195,021 4,244,002 4,145,426 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 481,908 173,388 2,422,376 2,653,922 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 5,317 4,640 207 154 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 2,873 2,667 72 49 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 2,357 2,142 88 74 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 2,526 2,242 114 103 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 2,368 2,043 116 100 : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,551 1,239 145 133 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,228 1,002 98 86 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 1,415 970 181 171 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 1,102 637 177 167 : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 778 402 140 130 $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 1,362 443 414 395 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 639 263 137 127 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 373 98 124 120 $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 350 82 153 148 : Total sales ............................................farms: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 $1,000: 10,892,201 3,137,851 4,200,868 4,103,232 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 3,530 2,026 665 631 $1,000: 1,626,831 535,657 570,608 556,473 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,497 1,241 549 525 $1,000: 1,607,176 521,273 568,335 554,451 Corn ...............................................farms: 1,117 609 192 174 $1,000: 405,868 121,285 120,807 116,003 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 788 372 156 144 $1,000: 398,382 116,050 120,009 115,320 Wheat ..............................................farms: 2,203 1,203 436 419 $1,000: 744,115 261,778 287,028 280,457 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1,538 724 365 350 $1,000: 730,200 252,152 285,316 (D) Soybeans ...........................................farms: 8 5 3 - $1,000: 135 (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: 6 1 1 1 $1,000: 337 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 1 1 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) Barley .............................................farms: 1,319 687 267 260 $1,000: 349,414 103,636 116,411 114,602 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 838 375 186 182 $1,000: 341,143 (D) 114,877 113,151 Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 771 406 155 148 $1,000: 126,961 48,785 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 479 224 107 101 $1,000: 121,065 45,368 44,931 44,032 Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 1,231 731 178 171 $1,000: 1,597,035 355,380 681,845 679,955 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 679 268 152 148 $1,000: 1,591,765 351,503 681,302 (D) : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 561 473 25 25 $1,000: 31,693 24,167 3,034 3,034 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 38 18 7 7 $1,000: 27,916 (D) 2,810 2,810 Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 446 382 19 19 $1,000: 29,683 22,568 2,771 2,771 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 29 13 4 4 $1,000: 26,766 (D) (D) (D) Berries ............................................farms: 234 192 11 11 $1,000: 2,010 1,599 263 263 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 7 5 2 2 $1,000: 943 (D) (D) (D) Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 599 408 35 31 $1,000: 122,254 23,713 8,601 8,555 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 percent: 9.4 8.2 8.1 1.1 1.0 2.4 Land in farms ............................................acres: 3,033,242 2,758,073 2,610,585 275,169 246,818 1,104,878 Average size of farm .................................acres: 1,414 1,465 1,413 1,050 1,073 1,998 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 $1,000: 3,521,885 3,246,170 (D) 275,715 201,394 63,699 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 1,641,904 1,723,935 (D) 1,052,348 875,624 115,188 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 295 263 254 32 32 175 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 86 80 72 6 6 48 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 91 59 57 32 26 36 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 98 90 90 8 8 72 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 141 117 117 24 21 68 : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 129 116 114 13 12 38 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 114 99 95 15 11 14 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 215 190 190 25 25 49 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 262 228 225 34 27 26 : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 227 201 200 26 25 9 $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 487 440 434 47 37 18 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 227 212 209 15 15 12 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 145 124 124 21 15 6 $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 115 104 101 11 7 - : Total sales ............................................farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 $1,000: 3,493,697 3,219,816 (D) 273,881 199,629 59,785 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 798 730 722 68 59 41 $1,000: 513,170 468,704 (D) 44,466 37,896 7,396 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 694 642 636 52 46 13 $1,000: 510,486 466,435 461,044 44,052 37,609 7,082 Corn ...............................................farms: 311 272 270 39 30 5 $1,000: 163,659 (D) 146,582 (D) (D) 118 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 260 228 226 32 26 - $1,000: 162,322 145,669 (D) 16,653 13,024 - Wheat ..............................................farms: 540 502 495 38 35 24 $1,000: 189,165 175,224 (D) 13,941 13,926 6,144 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 440 412 409 28 28 9 $1,000: 186,754 173,009 (D) 13,744 13,744 5,978 Soybeans ...........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: 4 4 4 - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Barley .............................................farms: 344 320 316 24 18 21 $1,000: 128,924 118,219 (D) 10,705 7,892 443 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 275 254 251 21 15 2 $1,000: 127,495 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 196 188 187 8 8 14 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 691 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 147 139 138 8 8 1 $1,000: (D) 27,223 (D) (D) (D) (D) Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 305 279 273 26 25 17 $1,000: 554,572 502,490 499,751 52,082 (D) 5,238 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 248 230 226 18 17 11 $1,000: 553,825 501,789 (D) 52,036 (D) 5,134 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 45 40 40 5 5 18 $1,000: 3,816 3,661 3,661 155 155 675 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 10 9 9 1 1 3 $1,000: (D) 3,508 3,508 (D) (D) (D) Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 29 27 27 2 2 16 $1,000: (D) 3,623 3,623 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 10 9 9 1 1 2 $1,000: (D) 3,504 3,504 (D) (D) (D) Berries ............................................farms: 24 19 19 5 5 7 $1,000: (D) 38 38 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 124 90 90 34 30 32 $1,000: 88,774 49,802 49,802 38,972 38,705 1,166 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod - Con. : : Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 183 75 13 13 $1,000: 117,897 20,515 8,268 8,268 Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 47 42 - - $1,000: 673 (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 47 42 - - $1,000: 673 (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 7,813 6,080 669 626 $1,000: 1,386,308 495,331 433,448 398,613 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,501 1,396 445 417 $1,000: 1,335,712 454,434 429,571 394,953 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 7,630 6,180 629 571 $1,000: 2,175,548 727,322 578,294 556,162 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,047 1,243 370 346 $1,000: 2,114,032 676,414 573,646 552,015 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 330 147 112 106 $1,000: 3,727,378 912,691 1,914,356 1,889,976 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 295 118 110 104 $1,000: 3,727,100 (D) (D) (D) Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 663 599 28 24 $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) 196 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 18 10 2 2 $1,000: 22,239 (D) (D) (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 1,454 1,277 65 56 $1,000: 46,709 30,851 6,166 6,036 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 50 30 7 7 $1,000: 40,891 26,394 5,603 5,603 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 1,028 883 46 42 $1,000: 12,951 10,903 522 504 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 54 48 2 2 $1,000: 4,770 4,248 (D) (D) Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 1,751 1,577 66 52 $1,000: 40,298 5,802 103 84 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 15 7 - - $1,000: 37,584 3,390 - - Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 51 7 3 3 $1,000: 76,464 (D) 1,830 1,830 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 39 4 3 3 $1,000: 76,279 (D) 1,830 1,830 Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 585 459 34 29 $1,000: 24,281 10,361 (D) 1,814 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 65 33 6 6 $1,000: 22,371 9,156 1,731 1,731 : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 4,296 2,854 677 621 $1,000: 132,405 57,170 43,134 42,194 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 719 430 123 114 $1,000: 99,099 34,346 22,435 21,624 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 1,499 1,289 81 71 $1,000: 20,984 10,265 1,900 1,835 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 638 494 59 52 $1,000: 57,669 18,695 (D) 8,167 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 $1,000: 9,317,904 2,744,986 3,517,613 3,435,528 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 407,304 148,965 2,007,770 2,199,442 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 9,896 7,356 1,029 961 $1,000: 765,559 228,882 283,116 278,006 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 5,657 4,968 251 218 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,673 1,189 202 192 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod - Con. : : Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 92 62 62 30 26 3 $1,000: 88,246 49,297 49,297 38,950 38,683 868 Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 1 1 1 - - 4 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - 3 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 1 1 1 - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - - Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 1 1 1 - - 4 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - 3 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1 1 1 - - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - - Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 930 842 837 88 74 134 $1,000: 449,583 380,200 (D) 69,384 40,651 7,946 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 631 574 570 57 43 29 $1,000: 444,647 375,689 (D) 68,959 40,226 7,059 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 711 639 629 72 69 110 $1,000: 859,491 841,613 (D) 17,878 (D) 10,442 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 390 347 340 43 42 44 $1,000: 854,422 836,866 (D) 17,556 (D) 9,549 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 71 71 71 - - - $1,000: 900,331 900,331 900,331 - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 67 67 67 - - - $1,000: 900,297 900,297 900,297 - - - Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 34 33 33 1 - 2 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) - (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 6 5 5 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) - - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 91 87 85 4 4 21 $1,000: 9,165 (D) (D) (D) (D) 527 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 12 8 7 4 4 1 $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 84 74 72 10 10 15 $1,000: 1,390 1,156 (D) 234 234 136 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 4 2 1 2 2 - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) - Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 84 72 72 12 11 24 $1,000: 34,362 (D) (D) (D) (D) 31 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 8 6 6 2 1 - $1,000: 34,194 (D) (D) (D) (D) - Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 14 12 12 2 2 27 $1,000: (D) 46,508 46,508 (D) (D) 26,160 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 8 8 8 - - 24 $1,000: 46,507 46,507 46,507 - - (D) Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 81 71 71 10 10 11 $1,000: 12,023 10,210 10,210 1,813 1,813 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 26 21 21 5 5 - $1,000: 11,484 9,719 9,719 1,764 1,764 - : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 621 552 537 69 61 144 $1,000: 28,188 26,353 25,924 1,834 1,765 3,914 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 158 140 139 18 18 8 $1,000: 41,624 29,134 (D) 12,489 12,489 695 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 121 110 109 11 11 8 $1,000: 8,683 8,608 (D) 76 76 136 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 77 68 67 9 9 8 $1,000: 30,040 29,027 (D) 1,013 1,013 (D) : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 $1,000: 2,992,037 2,755,189 (D) 236,849 178,776 63,268 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 1,394,889 1,463,191 (D) 904,003 777,285 114,408 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 1,336 1,190 1,178 146 130 175 $1,000: 249,260 227,762 225,216 21,499 17,130 4,301 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 318 278 276 40 40 120 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 245 219 215 26 23 37 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 636 368 115 108 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,930 831 461 443 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 10,419 7,762 1,074 996 $1,000: 410,258 113,642 163,714 161,349 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,344 6,258 416 369 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,444 824 251 240 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 523 269 95 85 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,108 411 312 302 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 7,732 5,412 925 861 $1,000: 378,944 112,776 146,908 144,415 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 2,522 2,225 92 82 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,881 1,484 155 135 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,602 986 256 241 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 515 278 88 85 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,212 439 334 318 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 1,065 751 105 97 $1,000: 4,094 1,802 1,070 1,012 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 6,503 5,429 435 390 $1,000: 722,700 228,113 175,161 (D) Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 4,196 3,810 152 131 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,502 1,187 124 112 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 476 301 78 70 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 140 65 25 24 $250,000 or more ........................................: 189 66 56 53 : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 3,243 2,558 304 284 $1,000: 121,882 45,582 41,211 40,290 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 4,301 3,715 208 177 $1,000: 600,818 182,531 133,950 (D) : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 13,525 11,440 854 750 $1,000: 2,598,813 662,498 1,097,344 1,085,999 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 8,387 7,541 328 266 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,621 3,030 238 218 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 912 632 113 101 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 207 120 34 30 $250,000 or more ........................................: 398 117 141 135 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 21,557 17,391 1,645 1,478 $1,000: 395,457 145,033 134,851 131,306 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 15,681 13,796 724 619 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,613 2,619 369 329 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 862 487 141 133 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,401 489 411 397 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 15,852 12,354 1,396 1,285 $1,000: 357,174 117,291 129,839 126,996 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 4,788 4,305 175 155 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 6,414 5,383 395 358 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,982 1,998 386 350 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 605 297 114 109 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,063 371 326 313 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 18,678 14,782 1,555 1,408 $1,000: 632,154 211,085 229,062 223,239 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 11,397 10,009 526 463 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 4,430 3,422 409 358 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,046 628 145 137 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,805 723 475 450 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 5,697 3,429 857 810 $1,000: 1,043,118 286,333 390,395 377,286 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,583 1,317 84 77 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,302 898 162 153 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,427 770 233 216 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 639 244 159 152 $250,000 or more ........................................: 746 200 219 212 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 2,547 1,679 357 330 $1,000: 101,956 34,123 34,010 (D) Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 452 373 35 33 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 752 576 68 59 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 753 475 128 116 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 256 137 38 37 $50,000 or more .........................................: 334 118 88 85 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 148 137 136 11 11 5 $50,000 or more .........................................: 625 556 551 69 56 13 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 1,359 1,203 1,192 156 134 224 $1,000: 130,239 120,286 119,316 9,952 6,970 2,662 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 488 418 415 70 64 182 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 334 304 299 30 30 35 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 156 141 141 15 9 3 $50,000 or more .........................................: 381 340 337 41 31 4 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 1,235 1,100 1,089 135 114 160 $1,000: 117,751 101,483 100,215 16,268 13,848 1,508 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 145 135 133 10 10 60 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 187 161 160 26 21 55 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 323 278 275 45 38 37 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 148 138 136 10 10 1 $50,000 or more .........................................: 432 388 385 44 35 7 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 193 172 170 21 10 16 $1,000: 1,198 1,011 (D) 187 54 24 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 537 484 478 53 48 102 $1,000: 318,451 302,785 (D) 15,666 (D) 975 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 175 167 167 8 6 59 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 158 140 139 18 17 33 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 88 76 75 12 12 9 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 49 45 44 4 4 1 $250,000 or more ........................................: 67 56 53 11 9 - : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 328 293 288 35 33 53 $1,000: 34,511 27,827 27,343 6,683 (D) 579 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 316 281 278 35 32 62 $1,000: 283,940 274,958 (D) 8,983 (D) 396 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 987 878 866 109 104 244 $1,000: 829,759 811,433 (D) 18,326 (D) 9,211 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 378 339 336 39 37 140 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 293 258 255 35 35 60 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 142 120 119 22 21 25 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 45 38 36 7 7 8 $250,000 or more ........................................: 129 123 120 6 4 11 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 2,034 1,797 1,767 237 210 487 $1,000: 112,504 101,168 99,525 11,336 9,571 3,069 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 795 698 685 97 88 366 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 530 470 461 60 54 95 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 220 195 194 25 22 14 $50,000 or more .........................................: 489 434 427 55 46 12 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 1,773 1,569 1,548 204 180 329 $1,000: 106,422 95,314 93,366 11,108 8,409 3,622 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 201 179 178 22 20 107 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 514 449 445 65 56 122 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 522 455 446 67 66 76 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 182 174 171 8 8 12 $50,000 or more .........................................: 354 312 308 42 30 12 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 1,929 1,710 1,688 219 194 412 $1,000: 187,204 168,418 166,132 18,786 15,418 4,803 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 604 535 530 69 63 258 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 488 440 432 48 47 111 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 251 217 214 34 30 22 $50,000 or more .........................................: 586 518 512 68 54 21 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 1,242 1,101 1,086 141 119 169 $1,000: 351,151 303,482 293,374 47,669 30,763 15,239 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 121 101 98 20 20 61 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 202 189 189 13 13 40 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 388 355 351 33 22 36 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 221 197 193 24 23 15 $250,000 or more ........................................: 310 259 255 51 41 17 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 441 390 382 51 42 70 $1,000: 33,235 29,045 28,756 4,191 2,882 588 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 34 27 27 7 7 10 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 81 70 69 11 7 27 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 123 112 109 11 11 27 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 75 73 71 2 2 6 $50,000 or more .........................................: 128 108 106 20 15 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 5,857 4,298 648 602 $1,000: 247,148 83,178 90,198 88,198 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 1,290 1,155 69 66 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,893 1,584 130 115 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,497 1,046 157 143 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 401 222 66 59 $50,000 or more .........................................: 776 291 226 219 : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 5,471 3,662 760 704 $1,000: 550,451 146,996 233,431 230,391 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,036 1,715 128 107 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 590 448 62 55 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 871 594 114 104 $25,000 or more .........................................: 1,974 905 456 438 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 1,821 1,137 316 304 $1,000: 80,056 23,923 35,860 35,517 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 408 340 34 28 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 436 330 39 39 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 516 307 87 85 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 151 60 44 44 $50,000 or more .........................................: 310 100 112 108 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 6,805 4,885 800 753 $1,000: 286,045 97,878 102,701 100,303 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,537 2,101 156 136 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,688 2,095 232 223 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,113 536 259 245 $100,000 or more ........................................: 467 153 153 149 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 4,788 3,477 561 529 $1,000: 188,811 66,982 61,394 59,491 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 429 361 24 23 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,138 949 76 60 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 2,184 1,722 183 181 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 452 221 117 109 $50,000 or more .......................................: 585 224 161 156 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 4,230 2,948 528 503 $1,000: 97,234 30,895 41,307 40,812 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 780 655 55 50 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,752 1,409 101 96 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 1,098 686 176 166 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 288 113 86 82 $50,000 or more .......................................: 312 85 110 109 : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 21,486 17,362 1,609 1,438 $1,000: 128,588 63,072 26,879 25,924 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 17,581 15,146 928 806 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,036 1,339 291 267 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,125 609 183 164 $25,000 or more .........................................: 744 268 207 201 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 9,388 7,721 700 624 $1,000: 172,113 52,120 72,899 71,305 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,856 6,868 391 332 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,128 723 160 149 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 143 62 45 43 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 91 23 32 32 $100,000 or more ........................................: 170 45 72 68 : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 12,433 9,154 1,319 1,207 $1,000: 447,370 138,044 171,246 158,295 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,586 6,443 444 379 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,987 1,979 395 374 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 634 299 126 116 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 642 277 160 151 $100,000 or more ........................................: 584 156 194 187 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 867 544 146 134 $1,000: 36,781 14,779 8,801 8,262 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 15,202 11,667 1,441 1,304 $1,000: 892,639 323,650 295,355 284,403 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 $1,000: 2,034,090 577,525 813,029 792,538 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 88,914 31,341 464,058 507,387 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 806 718 713 88 70 105 $1,000: 72,399 62,384 61,668 10,015 7,001 1,373 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 42 28 28 14 8 24 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 136 132 132 4 4 43 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 267 245 243 22 22 27 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 107 100 100 7 7 6 $50,000 or more .........................................: 254 213 210 41 29 5 : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 974 878 866 96 86 75 $1,000: 168,861 139,278 136,066 29,583 28,035 1,162 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 158 150 147 8 6 35 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 68 65 64 3 3 12 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 144 126 123 18 14 19 $25,000 or more .........................................: 604 537 532 67 63 9 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 337 298 293 39 32 31 $1,000: 18,771 17,164 16,812 1,606 (D) 1,503 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 32 23 22 9 9 2 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 52 52 52 - - 15 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 115 103 102 12 10 7 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 47 43 43 4 1 - $50,000 or more .........................................: 91 77 74 14 12 7 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 1,026 942 932 84 83 94 $1,000: 82,911 78,589 77,247 4,322 (D) 2,556 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 247 224 222 23 23 33 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 318 300 299 18 18 43 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 305 274 271 31 31 13 $100,000 or more ........................................: 156 144 140 12 11 5 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 680 626 622 54 54 70 $1,000: 58,321 55,836 (D) 2,485 2,485 2,113 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 36 35 35 1 1 8 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 101 89 88 12 12 12 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 245 230 230 15 15 34 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 109 98 97 11 11 5 $50,000 or more .......................................: 189 174 172 15 15 11 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 693 651 643 42 41 61 $1,000: 24,590 22,753 (D) 1,837 (D) 443 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 63 61 61 2 2 7 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 208 198 197 10 10 34 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 220 207 206 13 13 16 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 87 85 81 2 2 2 $50,000 or more .......................................: 115 100 98 15 14 2 : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 2,002 1,763 1,730 239 212 513 $1,000: 35,515 33,054 32,217 2,461 1,918 3,123 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,108 957 935 151 138 399 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 342 311 311 31 27 64 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 306 272 266 34 28 27 $25,000 or more .........................................: 246 223 218 23 19 23 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 802 733 723 69 66 165 $1,000: 45,824 43,010 40,211 2,814 (D) 1,271 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 477 446 442 31 31 120 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 205 175 174 30 29 40 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 36 34 32 2 2 - $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 36 33 33 3 2 - $100,000 or more ........................................: 48 45 42 3 2 5 : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 1,667 1,485 1,462 182 157 293 $1,000: 131,779 120,533 117,361 11,245 8,027 6,301 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 515 462 454 53 46 184 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 543 472 463 71 63 70 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 195 183 180 12 12 14 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 192 181 180 11 11 13 $100,000 or more ........................................: 222 187 185 35 25 12 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 171 158 156 13 13 6 $1,000: 13,167 10,391 (D) 2,776 2,776 33 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 1,737 1,529 1,507 208 185 357 $1,000: 263,898 237,451 234,818 26,447 19,452 9,736 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 $1,000: 628,234 580,694 (D) 47,540 30,552 15,302 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 292,883 308,388 (D) 181,449 132,835 27,671 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 8,958 6,327 1,116 1,022 Average net gain .................................dollars: 275,011 129,432 789,324 838,554 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 625 576 14 13 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,519 1,333 88 73 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 841 678 72 69 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,326 1,069 83 77 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,020 771 86 73 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,627 1,900 773 717 : Farms with net losses .................................number: 13,919 12,100 636 540 Average net loss .................................dollars: 30,854 19,950 106,694 119,378 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 848 789 14 9 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,810 3,472 110 89 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,928 2,660 107 87 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,582 3,155 165 126 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,445 1,189 107 100 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,306 835 133 129 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 $1,000: 1,897,116 525,394 801,128 780,909 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 82,927 28,512 457,265 499,942 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 8,919 6,312 1,112 1,018 Average net gain .................................dollars: 263,468 122,293 783,288 832,348 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 636 588 14 13 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,511 1,325 88 73 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 846 686 72 69 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,342 1,077 85 78 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 994 751 89 76 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,590 1,885 764 709 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 13,958 12,115 640 544 Average net loss .................................dollars: 32,437 20,348 109,199 122,098 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 843 786 14 9 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,827 3,489 109 89 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,922 2,656 104 86 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,574 3,141 166 125 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,453 1,192 110 102 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,339 851 137 133 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 39 11 13 13 $1,000: 5,255 (D) 2,142 2,142 : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 7,733 5,506 924 842 $1,000: 327,387 127,491 86,640 82,640 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 1,707 1,197 215 205 $1,000: 65,446 29,667 12,661 12,554 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 3,629 2,591 422 375 $1,000: 116,760 45,988 31,371 29,118 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 426 308 43 32 $1,000: 10,515 5,379 (D) 2,189 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 200 125 20 18 $1,000: 16,909 1,998 3,196 (D) Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 2,432 1,514 390 363 $1,000: 27,917 7,782 10,630 10,144 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 966 587 170 159 $1,000: 51,896 22,316 16,827 16,444 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 129 99 19 18 $1,000: 982 644 (D) (D) Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 870 615 99 95 $1,000: 36,961 13,718 9,254 (D) : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 15,823 12,250 1,404 1,287 acres: 5,623,516 2,257,945 1,735,925 1,680,017 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 13,037 10,082 1,189 1,104 acres: 4,370,363 1,668,976 1,414,929 1,375,244 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 7,454 6,685 255 221 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 1,154 894 95 89 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 1,197 881 144 133 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 1,342 828 199 187 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 826 434 182 172 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 1,266 1,123 1,102 143 121 249 Average net gain .................................dollars: 581,670 592,118 (D) 499,616 431,921 109,854 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 20 18 18 2 2 15 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 54 37 37 17 11 44 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 54 49 47 5 5 37 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 125 103 102 22 18 49 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 136 124 118 12 11 27 $50,000 or more .........................................: 877 792 780 85 74 77 : Farms with net losses .................................number: 879 760 746 119 109 304 Average net loss .................................dollars: 123,049 110,862 111,612 200,886 199,179 39,643 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 36 31 28 5 5 9 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 154 133 132 21 21 74 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 97 73 73 24 23 64 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 179 163 159 16 16 83 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 119 117 115 2 2 30 $50,000 or more .........................................: 294 243 239 51 42 44 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 $1,000: 555,954 518,127 507,191 37,826 20,839 14,641 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 259,186 275,161 274,454 144,375 90,602 26,475 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 1,247 1,105 1,084 142 120 248 Average net gain .................................dollars: 545,464 553,685 553,407 481,490 409,908 107,860 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 19 17 17 2 2 15 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 54 37 37 17 11 44 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 51 46 44 5 5 37 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 131 110 109 21 17 49 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 127 115 109 12 11 27 $50,000 or more .........................................: 865 780 768 85 74 76 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 898 778 764 120 110 305 Average net loss .................................dollars: 138,352 120,430 121,338 254,545 257,731 39,700 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 34 29 26 5 5 9 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 155 134 133 21 21 74 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 97 73 73 24 23 65 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 185 166 162 19 19 82 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 121 119 117 2 2 30 $50,000 or more .........................................: 306 257 253 49 40 45 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 13 10 10 3 3 2 $1,000: 2,078 1,454 1,454 624 624 (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 1,089 973 952 116 105 214 $1,000: 98,386 89,713 81,296 8,673 7,934 14,871 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 263 251 249 12 12 32 $1,000: 22,482 22,164 (D) 318 318 636 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 475 415 399 60 50 141 $1,000: 28,655 25,605 (D) 3,050 (D) 10,747 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 59 56 54 3 3 16 $1,000: 2,250 (D) 2,156 (D) (D) (D) Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 46 44 42 2 2 9 $1,000: 11,424 (D) 11,329 (D) (D) 291 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 489 440 435 49 47 39 $1,000: 9,373 8,665 (D) 708 (D) 133 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 184 165 160 19 19 25 $1,000: 11,917 11,010 (D) 907 907 836 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 10 10 10 - - 1 $1,000: 97 97 97 - - (D) Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 144 129 126 15 14 12 $1,000: 12,188 8,541 8,391 3,647 (D) 1,802 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 1,762 1,566 1,538 196 168 407 acres: 1,504,882 1,371,277 1,345,773 133,605 110,314 124,764 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 1,511 1,347 1,333 164 144 255 acres: 1,251,248 1,142,270 1,126,293 108,978 91,019 35,210 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 350 310 308 40 36 164 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 134 105 104 29 29 31 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 149 137 136 12 12 23 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 291 255 249 36 29 24 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 205 191 190 14 12 5 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : Harvested cropland - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: 519 200 104 95 2,000 acres or more .....................................: 545 160 210 207 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 1,737 1,348 154 140 acres: 214,761 117,683 47,774 44,806 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 983 701 83 76 acres: 59,462 31,410 8,275 7,489 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 3,822 2,753 440 395 acres: 660,805 305,580 174,620 166,260 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 1,696 1,125 257 238 acres: 318,125 134,296 90,327 86,218 : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 3,406 2,729 235 206 acres: 479,705 252,431 55,001 50,185 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 1,561 1,299 84 78 acres: 250,428 147,708 30,188 29,468 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 2,265 1,776 170 147 acres: 229,277 104,723 24,813 20,717 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 12,204 10,288 796 704 acres: 5,012,618 1,881,981 916,424 860,920 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 13,192 10,791 936 832 acres: 432,124 218,862 91,274 87,662 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 14,191 11,435 1,076 987 acres: 3,167,499 1,200,932 991,749 965,634 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 10,389 7,999 946 875 acres: 2,904,105 1,049,383 942,900 919,563 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 6,620 5,757 321 282 acres: 263,394 151,549 48,849 46,071 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 1,681 1,124 287 257 acres: 423,658 203,026 110,914 105,706 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 2,599 1,419 542 519 acres: 2,933,445 1,021,903 1,047,578 1,025,168 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 227 122 40 37 $1,000: 166,224 35,951 82,670 (D) : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 $1,000: 48,610,483 23,061,842 11,493,579 11,024,520 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,124,863 1,251,525 6,560,262 7,057,951 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,209 5,001 4,107 4,115 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,300 1,143 57 45 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,091 973 50 39 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 1,951 1,733 64 45 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 5,883 5,269 228 185 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 5,555 4,825 272 236 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 2,930 2,245 302 287 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 2,186 1,381 332 301 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 969 512 159 142 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 1,012 346 288 282 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 22,877 18,427 1,752 1,562 $1,000: 4,930,153 2,341,200 1,215,918 1,164,789 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 1,609 1,426 55 46 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 1,735 1,539 81 62 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 2,733 2,484 68 50 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 5,105 4,475 237 205 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 4,134 3,507 256 222 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 3,057 2,357 273 241 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 2,429 1,725 286 261 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 2,075 914 496 475 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : Harvested cropland - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: 210 198 197 12 11 5 2,000 acres or more .....................................: 172 151 149 21 15 3 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 194 178 176 16 16 41 acres: 46,561 45,808 (D) 753 753 2,743 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 170 154 152 16 10 29 acres: 17,213 15,426 (D) 1,787 1,343 2,564 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 453 405 388 48 36 176 acres: 105,261 95,457 91,262 9,804 6,540 75,344 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 261 233 228 28 23 53 acres: 84,599 72,316 71,542 12,283 10,659 8,903 : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 296 264 259 32 27 146 acres: 111,701 101,132 99,296 10,569 9,677 60,572 Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 142 134 133 8 8 36 acres: 52,980 47,383 (D) 5,597 5,597 19,552 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 198 170 166 28 23 121 acres: 58,721 53,749 (D) 4,972 4,080 41,020 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 906 794 783 112 103 214 acres: 1,321,990 1,198,513 1,080,577 123,477 120,327 892,223 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 1,151 1,020 1,004 131 110 314 acres: 94,669 87,151 84,939 7,518 6,500 27,319 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 1,468 1,283 1,267 185 165 212 acres: 946,636 853,432 836,016 93,204 76,637 28,182 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 1,275 1,128 1,115 147 131 169 acres: 894,966 804,462 789,532 90,504 74,005 16,856 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 459 401 396 58 54 83 acres: 51,670 48,970 46,484 2,700 2,632 11,326 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 161 146 139 15 7 109 acres: 47,615 44,450 44,310 3,165 274 62,103 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 595 559 553 36 36 43 acres: 830,378 781,803 774,028 48,575 48,575 33,586 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 60 55 55 5 4 5 $1,000: 47,555 46,157 46,157 1,398 (D) 49 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 $1,000: 12,188,116 10,965,503 10,586,366 1,222,613 956,131 1,866,947 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 5,682,105 5,823,422 5,728,553 4,666,461 4,157,090 3,376,034 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,018 3,976 4,055 4,443 3,874 1,690 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 60 48 48 12 12 40 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 51 45 41 6 6 17 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 91 73 73 18 18 63 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 276 238 228 38 34 110 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 317 276 272 41 34 141 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 321 277 274 44 36 62 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 411 372 365 39 37 62 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 275 254 253 21 21 23 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 343 300 294 43 32 35 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 553 $1,000: 1,311,381 1,165,653 1,150,066 145,728 127,033 61,654 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 86 78 78 8 6 42 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 70 65 65 5 5 45 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 112 97 95 15 14 69 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 235 192 178 43 37 158 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 302 259 258 43 42 69 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 338 305 297 33 28 89 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 360 315 312 45 44 58 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 642 572 565 70 54 23 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 18,416 14,755 1,464 1,329 number: 54,948 33,146 9,922 9,407 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 16,968 13,500 1,371 1,253 number: 42,226 27,730 6,056 5,628 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 7,400 6,150 447 403 number: 9,283 7,483 666 611 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 9,749 7,669 787 705 number: 14,421 10,545 1,464 1,327 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 6,684 4,428 952 878 number: 18,522 9,702 3,926 3,690 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 2,292 1,229 455 431 number: 3,237 1,608 729 691 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - number: - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 2,307 1,652 268 247 number: 2,680 1,864 325 299 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 6,213 4,707 592 545 number: 7,569 5,598 776 721 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 8,673 6,302 962 908 acres treated: 3,496,612 1,277,228 1,141,025 1,115,663 Manure used ..............................................farms: 3,432 2,701 274 252 acres treated: 331,595 120,935 102,700 99,985 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 497 353 37 33 acres treated: 55,232 17,786 14,094 13,299 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 2,975 1,820 440 419 acres: 1,304,919 392,929 467,225 462,291 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 8,233 5,878 942 879 acres: 3,216,414 1,138,130 1,089,105 1,062,523 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 714 342 164 160 acres: 311,847 76,319 145,518 144,923 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 1,321 719 239 230 acres: 759,333 238,713 300,438 294,850 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 877 444 162 157 acres on which used: 305,558 78,102 122,264 120,419 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 405 282 55 46 acres: 74,786 28,500 29,388 23,325 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 2,229 1,882 108 93 acres: 217,276 118,160 19,969 17,105 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 427 303 40 36 acres: 166,621 71,850 20,173 18,729 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 1,798 1,213 255 241 acres: 641,103 236,248 251,996 249,302 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 2,102 1,318 346 321 acres: 983,544 354,809 334,436 316,470 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 4,226 2,767 594 553 acres: 1,842,044 618,225 626,720 616,337 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 1,326 889 163 158 acres: 127,777 52,853 34,267 32,142 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 2,717 1,561 452 436 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 1,682 1,293 125 105 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 1,427 1,119 109 89 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 99 56 15 12 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 10 7 2 2 Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 191 155 2 2 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 82 43 11 7 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 83 52 10 10 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 17,125 14,412 1,004 871 Part owners ..............................................farms: 4,463 3,086 574 538 Tenants ..................................................farms: 1,289 929 174 153 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 21,665 17,561 1,583 1,414 acres: 8,813,519 3,366,842 1,831,815 1,734,678 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 21,588 17,498 1,578 1,409 acres: 7,737,908 2,902,067 1,666,247 1,591,635 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 5,829 4,072 760 703 acres: 3,852,080 1,722,727 1,154,520 1,107,902 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 5,752 4,015 748 691 acres: 3,810,055 1,709,152 1,132,377 1,087,149 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 1,802 1,604 1,585 198 177 395 number: 11,002 9,741 9,624 1,261 972 878 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 1,756 1,569 1,550 187 168 341 number: 7,738 7,014 6,920 724 572 702 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 631 588 583 43 41 172 number: 924 854 846 70 (D) 210 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 1,088 976 965 112 103 205 number: 2,139 1,905 1,873 234 (D) 273 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 1,181 1,056 1,043 125 108 123 number: 4,675 4,255 4,201 420 338 219 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 564 532 527 32 28 44 number: 846 802 793 44 40 54 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - - number: - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 335 292 290 43 38 52 number: 439 383 (D) 56 51 52 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 794 715 706 79 78 120 number: 1,050 943 928 107 (D) 145 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 1,258 1,117 1,105 141 125 151 acres treated: 1,034,555 933,518 921,943 101,037 81,155 43,804 Manure used ..............................................farms: 400 364 361 36 36 57 acres treated: 103,284 83,958 (D) 19,326 19,326 4,676 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 98 85 84 13 12 9 acres treated: 23,204 22,550 (D) 654 (D) 148 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 670 587 581 83 72 45 acres: 431,161 376,268 (D) 54,893 47,501 13,604 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 1,232 1,101 1,090 131 115 181 acres: 946,808 860,841 850,864 85,967 75,295 42,371 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 191 169 166 22 18 17 acres: 88,175 79,408 79,270 8,767 7,390 1,835 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 337 292 286 45 37 26 acres: 218,098 194,815 (D) 23,283 20,150 2,084 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 259 233 231 26 25 12 acres on which used: 103,051 91,788 (D) 11,263 (D) 2,141 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 63 54 54 9 9 5 acres: 16,786 15,906 15,906 880 880 112 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 194 174 172 20 13 45 acres: 78,071 71,351 (D) 6,720 (D) 1,076 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 68 63 61 5 5 16 acres: 61,129 (D) 30,047 (D) (D) 13,469 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 283 253 250 30 30 47 acres: 146,500 139,624 135,506 6,876 6,876 6,359 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 390 355 350 35 32 48 acres: 283,540 265,672 (D) 17,868 17,862 10,759 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 794 705 698 89 74 71 acres: 585,633 530,541 525,822 55,092 41,997 11,466 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 245 221 220 24 15 29 acres: 39,517 31,307 (D) 8,210 2,006 1,140 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 667 592 590 75 59 37 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 213 184 179 29 29 51 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 160 138 133 22 22 39 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 24 20 19 4 4 4 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 1 1 1 - - - Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 27 27 27 - - 7 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 23 18 18 5 5 5 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 18 15 14 3 3 3 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 1,238 1,069 1,044 169 146 471 Part owners ..............................................farms: 738 667 659 71 63 65 Tenants ..................................................farms: 169 147 145 22 21 17 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 1,984 1,743 1,710 241 210 537 acres: 2,311,875 2,119,972 2,005,448 191,903 163,745 1,302,987 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 1,976 1,736 1,703 240 209 536 acres: 2,129,392 1,963,287 (D) 166,105 140,240 1,040,202 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 915 822 810 93 84 82 acres: 910,146 800,842 (D) 109,304 106,578 64,687 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 907 814 804 93 84 82 acres: 903,850 794,786 (D) 109,064 106,578 64,676 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OWNED AND RENTED LAND - Con. : : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 3,262 2,315 383 344 acres: 1,117,636 478,350 187,711 163,796 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 44,714 33,799 4,472 4,016 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 6,958 5,995 288 240 2 producers ...............................................: 12,840 10,782 829 754 3 producers ...............................................: 1,621 936 282 255 4 producers ...............................................: 910 479 231 201 5 or more producers .......................................: 548 235 122 112 : Total male producers ........................................: 27,035 19,671 3,044 2,733 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 17,639 15,193 834 747 2 producers .............................................: 2,533 1,427 529 462 3 producers .............................................: 838 353 250 225 4 producers .............................................: 193 63 42 42 5 or more producers .....................................: 173 56 37 34 : Total female producers ......................................: 17,679 14,128 1,428 1,283 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 14,310 12,084 825 759 2 producers .............................................: 1,105 697 209 180 3 producers .............................................: 163 92 36 29 4 producers .............................................: 83 54 13 13 5 or more producers .....................................: 58 28 5 5 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 26,384 19,450 2,894 2,589 Female ......................................................: 16,949 13,773 1,310 1,176 : Hired managers ................................................: 3,382 991 757 735 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 17,793 12,468 2,271 2,120 Other .......................................................: 25,540 20,755 1,933 1,645 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 33,141 27,160 2,437 2,247 Not on farm operated ........................................: 10,192 6,063 1,767 1,518 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 16,151 11,546 1,848 1,704 Any .........................................................: 27,182 21,677 2,356 2,061 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 4,566 3,516 422 374 50 to 99 days .............................................: 2,032 1,577 194 170 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 3,482 2,866 237 216 200 days or more ..........................................: 17,102 13,718 1,503 1,301 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 2,561 1,958 224 198 3 or 4 years ................................................: 4,392 3,489 404 343 5 to 9 years ................................................: 9,426 7,458 823 744 10 years or more ............................................: 26,954 20,318 2,753 2,480 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 19.0 18.6 19.9 20.0 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 7,099 5,644 576 486 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 7,699 6,108 723 650 11 years or more ............................................: 28,535 21,471 2,905 2,629 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 21.7 21.2 22.9 23.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 832 708 36 28 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 3,027 2,140 453 395 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 6,911 5,340 726 661 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 7,320 5,588 671 606 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 10,123 7,644 999 890 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 10,095 7,916 829 754 75 years and over ...........................................: 5,025 3,887 490 431 : Average age .................................................: 56.6 56.8 55.5 55.5 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 3,859 2,848 489 423 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 1,341 1,081 111 101 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 290 206 32 22 Asian .......................................................: 144 95 28 16 Black or African American ...................................: 19 16 1 1 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 42 37 2 2 White .......................................................: 42,509 32,609 4,129 3,712 More than one race reported .................................: 329 260 12 12 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OWNED AND RENTED LAND - Con. : : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 438 388 374 50 46 126 acres: 188,779 162,741 155,365 26,038 23,505 262,796 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 5,141 4,390 4,263 751 638 1,302 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 505 426 417 79 63 170 2 producers ...............................................: 984 903 900 81 80 245 3 producers ...............................................: 334 291 274 43 43 69 4 producers ...............................................: 182 164 164 18 17 18 5 or more producers .......................................: 140 99 93 41 27 51 : Total male producers ........................................: 3,422 2,879 2,810 543 448 898 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 1,282 1,149 1,138 133 116 330 2 producers .............................................: 490 446 433 44 44 87 3 producers .............................................: 189 156 152 33 33 46 4 producers .............................................: 78 65 60 13 10 10 5 or more producers .....................................: 46 18 18 28 17 34 : Total female producers ......................................: 1,719 1,511 1,453 208 190 404 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 1,110 1,000 982 110 106 291 2 producers .............................................: 177 160 159 17 12 22 3 producers .............................................: 26 26 25 - - 9 4 producers .............................................: 16 9 9 7 6 - 5 or more producers .....................................: 19 12 7 7 7 6 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 3,238 2,777 2,725 461 396 802 Female ......................................................: 1,525 1,380 1,342 145 132 341 : Hired managers ................................................: 1,512 1,318 1,296 194 156 122 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 2,576 2,299 2,278 277 245 478 Other .......................................................: 2,187 1,858 1,789 329 283 665 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 2,985 2,759 2,736 226 221 559 Not on farm operated ........................................: 1,778 1,398 1,331 380 307 584 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 2,248 1,986 1,935 262 226 509 Any .........................................................: 2,515 2,171 2,132 344 302 634 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 511 474 451 37 37 117 50 to 99 days .............................................: 206 192 188 14 14 55 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 306 282 277 24 22 73 200 days or more ..........................................: 1,492 1,223 1,216 269 229 389 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 294 205 204 89 81 85 3 or 4 years ................................................: 400 325 322 75 64 99 5 to 9 years ................................................: 843 728 724 115 106 302 10 years or more ............................................: 3,226 2,899 2,817 327 277 657 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 21.3 22.2 22.2 15.0 14.9 18.2 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 664 501 498 163 151 215 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 650 563 557 87 71 218 11 years or more ............................................: 3,449 3,093 3,012 356 306 710 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 24.3 25.2 25.2 17.8 17.8 21.8 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 75 69 69 6 6 13 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 372 319 316 53 40 62 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 739 631 628 108 95 106 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 945 797 789 148 133 116 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 1,156 1,019 990 137 122 324 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 1,050 959 934 91 76 300 75 years and over ...........................................: 426 363 341 63 56 222 : Average age .................................................: 55.6 55.9 55.7 53.9 54.0 61.2 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 447 388 385 59 46 75 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 138 121 113 17 9 11 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 21 21 21 - - 31 Asian .......................................................: 17 17 17 - - 4 Black or African American ...................................: 2 2 2 - - - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: - - - - - 3 White .......................................................: 4,689 4,095 4,005 594 516 1,082 More than one race reported .................................: 34 22 22 12 12 23 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ - Con. : : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 39,671 30,249 3,914 3,524 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 3,662 2,974 290 241 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 86,167 62,728 10,090 9,098 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 37,172 29,037 3,389 3,073 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 32,598 25,362 2,942 2,659 Livestock decisions .........................................: 26,379 21,534 2,069 1,797 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 25,823 19,697 2,491 2,256 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 30,863 23,769 2,964 2,687 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 23,727 17,723 2,548 2,306 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 21,570 18,427 1,264 1,160 acres: 9,774,644 4,611,219 2,191,448 2,113,836 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 3,390 2,164 1,182 1,135 acres: 2,655,263 1,033,270 1,556,036 1,520,049 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 18,427 18,427 - - acres: 4,611,219 4,611,219 - - Partnership ..............................................farms: 1,752 - 1,752 1,562 acres: 2,798,624 - 2,798,624 2,678,784 Registered under State law .............................farms: 1,562 - 1,562 1,562 acres: 2,678,784 - 2,678,784 2,678,784 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 2,145 - - - acres: 3,033,242 - - - Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 - - - acres: 2,758,073 - - - More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 35 - - - 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 1,848 - - - : Other than family held .................................farms: 262 - - - acres: 275,169 - - - More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 32 - - - 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 230 - - - : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 553 - - - acres: 1,104,878 - - - : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 5,697 3,429 857 810 workers: 42,990 15,371 12,195 11,764 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 3,478 1,748 628 599 workers: 21,741 6,791 6,896 6,546 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 3,988 2,462 588 558 workers: 21,249 8,580 5,299 5,218 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 714 273 172 167 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 32 26 3 3 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 8,421 7,079 503 454 workers: 21,358 17,441 1,546 1,383 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 5,785 5,327 165 134 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 6,977 6,305 230 191 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 881 752 52 40 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 1,133 889 103 88 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 960 748 73 66 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 927 712 73 65 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 517 415 38 28 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 432 320 42 35 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 1,566 1,036 224 202 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 1,384 894 207 192 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 1,048 553 182 170 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 1,267 476 363 351 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 1,681 1,070 298 282 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 767 458 124 121 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 401 345 17 17 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 555 384 27 26 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 7,395 5,864 574 503 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 7,395 5,864 574 503 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 6,883 5,964 381 330 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 132 85 15 13 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 334 160 106 100 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ - Con. : : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 4,509 3,944 3,857 565 488 999 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 254 213 210 41 40 144 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 11,055 9,481 9,269 1,574 1,376 2,294 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 3,892 3,416 3,363 476 402 854 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 3,544 3,118 3,044 426 381 750 Livestock decisions .........................................: 2,276 2,046 1,985 230 226 500 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 3,100 2,772 2,705 328 300 535 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 3,449 3,059 3,010 390 325 681 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 2,740 2,517 2,461 223 223 716 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 1,540 1,434 1,419 106 94 339 acres: 2,147,348 2,014,433 1,969,755 132,915 128,304 824,629 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: - - - - - 44 acres: - - - - - 65,957 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Partnership ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Registered under State law .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Corporation ..............................................farms: 2,145 1,883 1,848 262 230 - acres: 3,033,242 2,758,073 2,610,585 275,169 246,818 - Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 1,883 1,848 - - - acres: 2,758,073 2,758,073 2,610,585 - - - More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 35 35 - - - - 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 1,848 1,848 1,848 - - - : Other than family held .................................farms: 262 - - 262 230 - acres: 275,169 - - 275,169 246,818 - More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 32 - - 32 - - 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 230 - - 230 230 - : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: - - - - - 553 acres: - - - - - 1,104,878 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 1,242 1,101 1,086 141 119 169 workers: 14,371 12,150 11,902 2,221 1,462 1,053 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 998 890 878 108 86 104 workers: 7,498 6,292 6,139 1,206 748 556 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 812 724 715 88 81 126 workers: 6,873 5,858 5,763 1,015 714 497 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 255 219 214 36 34 14 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 2 2 2 - - 1 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 631 568 557 63 56 208 workers: 1,693 1,565 1,514 128 114 678 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 224 186 180 38 34 69 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 299 258 254 41 33 143 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 57 45 45 12 12 20 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 87 58 57 29 29 54 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 101 84 84 17 15 38 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 111 103 100 8 8 31 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 46 43 43 3 3 18 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 61 54 51 7 7 9 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 250 216 212 34 31 56 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 247 234 227 13 9 36 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 279 260 260 19 15 34 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 383 342 335 41 34 45 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 293 273 271 20 20 20 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 175 159 154 16 15 10 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 23 20 20 3 3 16 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 110 76 76 34 30 34 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 730 635 615 95 73 227 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 730 635 615 95 73 227 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 418 379 375 39 36 120 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 28 21 19 7 7 4 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 68 66 66 2 2 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : : Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 179 164 5 5 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 601 542 16 14 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 1,092 998 40 28 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 2,857 2,393 149 123 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 17,963 16,330 624 548 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 1,235 909 129 127 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 1,207 733 181 168 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 875 370 210 201 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 290 85 120 116 Non-family farms ............................................: 1,307 - 488 402 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 19,417 15,498 1,570 1,418 Dial-up ...................................................: 537 429 37 35 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 10,022 7,825 855 776 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 12,438 9,839 1,038 934 Satellite .................................................: 5,457 4,401 418 375 Don't know ................................................: 905 760 52 43 Other .....................................................: 304 240 30 28 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 18,831 16,080 916 834 2 households ................................................: 2,888 1,868 504 442 3 households ................................................: 661 288 187 161 4 households ................................................: 291 106 93 82 5 or more households ........................................: 206 85 52 43 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 8,956 7,408 648 582 number: 2,517,987 913,926 862,352 843,435 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 3,651 3,374 90 78 10 to 49 ..................................................: 2,769 2,412 131 108 50 to 99 ..................................................: 770 597 72 66 100 to 199 ................................................: 606 423 92 88 200 to 499 ................................................: 607 412 82 72 500 or more ...............................................: 553 190 181 170 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 7,712 6,306 602 546 number: 1,113,728 401,755 427,875 418,540 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 7,379 6,123 510 458 number: 449,249 239,057 (D) 85,623 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 3,402 3,127 92 74 10 to 49 ..............................................: 2,343 1,949 148 133 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 432 77 68 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 335 79 78 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 226 68 63 500 or more ...........................................: 161 54 46 42 : Milk cows ............................................farms: 549 349 124 116 number: 664,479 162,698 (D) 332,917 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 259 231 17 15 10 to 49 ..............................................: 21 17 - - 50 to 99 ..............................................: 17 10 5 5 100 to 199 ............................................: 27 22 - - 200 to 499 ............................................: 58 23 20 18 500 or more ...........................................: 167 46 82 78 : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 6,745 5,413 578 523 number: 1,404,259 512,171 434,477 424,895 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 7,630 6,180 629 571 number: 1,835,062 697,519 511,790 494,262 $1,000: 2,175,548 727,322 578,294 556,162 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 2,533 1,947 302 279 number: 485,342 206,218 176,795 174,006 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 7,198 5,795 604 547 number: 1,349,720 491,301 334,995 320,256 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 228 130 38 34 number: 492,887 94,807 97,305 (D) : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 562 506 25 21 number: 21,157 8,855 362 213 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 517 477 20 18 25 to 49 ..................................................: 20 15 3 3 50 to 99 ..................................................: 5 - 2 - 100 to 199 ................................................: 6 6 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) - Con. : : Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 8 7 7 1 - 2 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 37 29 29 8 7 6 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 36 33 33 3 3 18 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 219 185 183 34 34 96 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 703 646 637 57 47 306 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 183 166 166 17 17 14 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 279 271 268 8 7 14 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 290 271 270 19 19 5 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 85 80 78 5 4 - Non-family farms ............................................: 605 449 429 156 136 214 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 1,954 1,732 1,699 222 190 395 Dial-up ...................................................: 62 55 53 7 7 9 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 1,153 1,023 1,011 130 109 189 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 1,306 1,163 1,150 143 118 255 Satellite .................................................: 525 450 434 75 62 113 Don't know ................................................: 69 65 63 4 4 24 Other .....................................................: 24 22 22 2 2 10 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 1,433 1,251 1,223 182 154 402 2 households ................................................: 435 397 397 38 35 81 3 households ................................................: 161 132 127 29 29 25 4 households ................................................: 60 51 51 9 9 32 5 or more households ........................................: 56 52 50 4 3 13 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 759 677 667 82 79 141 number: 727,572 709,098 (D) 18,474 (D) 14,137 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 141 127 127 14 14 46 10 to 49 ..................................................: 179 154 151 25 23 47 50 to 99 ..................................................: 88 79 79 9 9 13 100 to 199 ................................................: 75 70 70 5 5 16 200 to 499 ................................................: 100 89 89 11 11 13 500 or more ...............................................: 176 158 151 18 17 6 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 679 604 595 75 72 125 number: 274,578 263,759 (D) 10,819 (D) 9,520 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 621 546 537 75 72 125 number: (D) 98,657 (D) (D) (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 141 129 129 12 12 42 10 to 49 ..............................................: 202 176 173 26 24 44 50 to 99 ..............................................: 64 59 59 5 5 8 100 to 199 ............................................: 83 62 62 21 21 20 200 to 499 ............................................: 73 70 69 3 3 8 500 or more ...........................................: 58 50 45 8 7 3 : Milk cows ............................................farms: 74 72 72 2 2 2 number: (D) 165,102 165,102 (D) (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 9 7 7 2 2 2 10 to 49 ..............................................: 4 4 4 - - - 50 to 99 ..............................................: 2 2 2 - - - 100 to 199 ............................................: 5 5 5 - - - 200 to 499 ............................................: 15 15 15 - - - 500 or more ...........................................: 39 39 39 - - - : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 652 582 573 70 67 102 number: 452,994 445,339 (D) 7,655 7,603 4,617 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 711 639 629 72 69 110 number: 615,083 602,584 (D) 12,499 (D) 10,670 $1,000: 859,491 841,613 (D) 17,878 (D) 10,442 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 243 217 214 26 26 41 number: 100,044 98,476 (D) 1,568 1,568 2,285 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 696 629 619 67 64 103 number: 515,039 504,108 (D) 10,931 (D) 8,385 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 55 39 36 16 16 5 number: 300,070 297,093 (D) 2,977 2,977 705 : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 27 26 26 1 - 4 number: 11,910 (D) (D) (D) - 30 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 16 16 16 - - 4 25 to 49 ..................................................: 2 2 2 - - - 50 to 99 ..................................................: 3 3 3 - - - 100 to 199 ................................................: - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Hogs and pigs inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 ................................................: 9 6 - - 500 or more ...............................................: 5 2 - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 663 599 28 24 number: 100,260 (D) 1,431 1,371 $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) 196 : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 1,208 1,037 58 45 number: 230,681 140,558 28,866 28,297 Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 840 715 38 34 number: 198,506 126,183 29,835 29,605 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 6,660 5,748 391 332 number: 41,412 32,816 3,941 3,674 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 989 847 44 40 number: 3,200 2,720 139 134 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 1,474 1,336 72 57 number: 24,780 20,926 2,690 2,364 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 702 632 33 26 number: 11,265 9,306 1,448 1,304 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 3,514 3,171 125 100 number: 638,424 74,465 2,622 2,048 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 3,500 3,164 125 100 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 9 6 - - 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: 1 1 - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 2 - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: 2 - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 447 403 7 5 number: (D) 6,255 120 (D) : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 358 322 13 9 number: (D) 10,680 386 320 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 43 35 - - number: (D) 1,259 - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 155 140 1 1 number: 11,815 (D) (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 155 140 1 1 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 297 260 8 5 number: 4,644 3,598 36 26 Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 95 87 1 1 number: 4,156 (D) (D) (D) : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 1,322 689 267 260 acres: 538,586 184,652 167,166 163,180 bushels: 50,782,418 15,638,011 16,363,786 16,077,940 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,013 546 192 186 acres: 348,967 119,128 105,986 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 146 110 13 13 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 322 218 53 53 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 323 155 64 61 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 243 117 36 35 500 acres or more .........................................: 288 89 101 98 : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 648 385 114 103 acres: 126,508 47,382 38,321 36,187 bushels: 22,937,258 8,740,225 6,604,796 6,142,088 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 648 385 114 103 acres: 126,508 47,382 38,321 36,187 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 147 114 15 12 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 216 146 33 30 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 153 78 22 21 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 77 34 19 17 500 acres or more .........................................: 55 13 25 23 : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 772 353 167 151 acres: 258,326 (D) 94,360 92,906 tons: 7,412,427 1,819,702 (D) 2,756,495 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 770 351 167 151 acres: (D) (D) 94,360 92,906 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 97 67 7 4 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 238 135 39 30 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LIVESTOCK - Con. : : Hogs and pigs inventory - Con. : Farms with- - Con. : : 200 to 499 ................................................: 3 3 3 - - - 500 or more ...............................................: 3 2 2 1 - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 34 33 33 1 - 2 number: (D) 9,704 9,704 (D) - (D) $1,000: (D) (D) (D) (D) - (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 87 78 76 9 9 26 number: 56,289 45,940 (D) 10,349 10,349 4,968 Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 66 62 60 4 4 21 number: 40,355 32,559 (D) 7,796 7,796 2,133 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 429 363 353 66 64 92 number: 3,929 3,229 3,069 700 (D) 726 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 84 74 72 10 10 14 number: 288 197 (D) 91 91 53 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 54 46 46 8 8 12 number: 917 843 843 74 74 247 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 30 30 30 - - 7 number: 441 441 441 - - 70 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 165 144 144 21 20 53 number: 560,465 (D) (D) (D) (D) 872 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 158 139 139 19 19 53 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 3 3 3 - - - 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 2 2 2 - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: 2 - - 2 1 - : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 35 33 33 2 1 2 number: (D) 431 431 (D) (D) (D) : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 18 16 16 2 1 5 number: (D) 6,420 6,420 (D) (D) 110 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 8 6 6 2 1 - number: (D) 187 187 (D) (D) - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 14 14 14 - - - number: 3,106 3,106 3,106 - - - Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 14 14 14 - - - 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 26 23 23 3 3 3 number: 1,003 999 999 4 4 7 Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 7 6 6 1 1 - number: (D) 996 996 (D) (D) - : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 345 321 317 24 18 21 acres: 184,608 175,212 171,106 9,396 6,996 2,160 bushels: 18,699,226 17,484,341 (D) 1,214,885 839,693 81,395 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 267 244 241 23 17 8 acres: 123,483 (D) 110,699 (D) (D) 370 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 17 15 15 2 2 6 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 45 41 41 4 4 6 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 96 94 93 2 2 8 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 90 77 76 13 7 - 500 acres or more .........................................: 97 94 92 3 3 1 : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 144 133 133 11 8 5 acres: 40,728 39,915 39,915 813 738 77 bushels: 7,575,980 7,432,705 7,432,705 143,275 127,756 16,257 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 144 133 133 11 8 5 acres: 40,728 39,915 39,915 813 738 77 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 13 11 11 2 2 5 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 37 30 30 7 4 - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 53 52 52 1 1 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 24 23 23 1 1 - 500 acres or more .........................................: 17 17 17 - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 250 219 217 31 25 2 acres: 97,486 85,890 (D) 11,596 7,810 (D) tons: 2,797,934 2,520,654 (D) 277,280 199,988 (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 250 219 217 31 25 2 acres: 97,486 85,890 (D) 11,596 7,810 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 21 19 19 2 2 2 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 64 58 57 6 6 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Corn for silage or greenchop - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 210 84 42 40 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 97 41 27 25 500 acres or more .........................................: 130 26 52 52 : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 227 122 32 29 acres: 35,063 11,472 10,627 10,291 cwt: 868,671 268,624 293,992 287,287 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 213 114 26 24 acres: 31,511 9,827 8,720 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 37 30 2 2 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 92 51 10 9 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 62 32 8 6 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 22 7 6 6 500 acres or more .........................................: 14 2 6 6 : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 115 68 16 15 acres: 11,088 4,830 3,005 (D) bushels: 704,503 276,034 198,633 (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 41 21 5 4 acres: 4,324 1,016 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 22 19 - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 60 34 6 5 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 27 13 7 7 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 3 1 2 2 500 acres or more .........................................: 3 1 1 1 : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 5 - 1 1 acres: 485 - (D) (D) bushels: 52,100 - (D) (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 - - - acres: (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 4 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 - 1 1 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 8 5 3 - acres: 304 (D) (D) - bushels: 9,092 (D) (D) - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 2 3 - acres: 205 (D) (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 8 5 3 - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 452 226 77 74 acres: 178,358 52,209 71,941 71,410 tons: 6,570,132 1,934,021 2,656,466 (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 452 226 77 74 acres: 178,358 52,209 71,941 71,410 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: 10 5 1 1 acres: 938 (D) (D) (D) pounds: 1,500,019 (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 9 5 - - acres: (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 3 2 1 1 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 2 2 - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 1 - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 2,210 1,203 437 420 acres: 1,162,597 424,525 440,942 429,274 bushels: 93,723,621 33,617,897 35,940,959 35,079,156 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,318 709 239 232 acres: 448,708 145,889 179,191 176,838 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 256 176 21 21 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 539 374 61 56 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 480 262 102 99 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 317 141 55 53 500 acres or more .........................................: 618 250 198 191 : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 10,279 8,148 872 808 acres: 1,415,865 691,370 334,274 319,197 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 2,347,322 1,420,635 1,350,728 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 8,042 6,328 709 657 acres: 1,102,400 518,313 278,096 267,367 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4,884 4,509 136 121 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 2,460 1,956 189 171 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Corn for silage or greenchop - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 84 72 72 12 12 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 29 29 29 - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 52 41 40 11 5 - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 69 67 67 2 2 4 acres: (D) 11,802 11,802 (D) (D) (D) cwt: (D) 271,194 271,194 (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 69 67 67 2 2 4 acres: (D) 11,802 11,802 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 1 1 1 - - 4 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 31 31 31 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 22 22 22 - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 9 8 8 1 1 - 500 acres or more .........................................: 6 5 5 1 1 - : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 25 25 24 - - 6 acres: 3,071 3,071 (D) - - 182 bushels: 217,047 217,047 (D) - - 12,789 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 13 13 12 - - 2 acres: 1,979 1,979 (D) - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 2 2 2 - - 1 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 15 15 15 - - 5 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 7 7 6 - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 1 1 1 - - - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 4 4 4 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - bushels: (D) (D) (D) - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 4 4 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 4 4 4 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 144 132 132 12 3 5 acres: 53,762 51,693 51,693 2,069 (D) 446 tons: 1,965,991 1,883,454 1,883,454 82,537 (D) 13,654 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 144 132 132 12 3 5 acres: 53,762 51,693 51,693 2,069 (D) 446 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: 4 4 4 - - - acres: 56 56 56 - - - pounds: 148,000 148,000 148,000 - - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 4 4 - - - acres: 56 56 56 - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 4 4 - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 540 502 495 38 35 30 acres: 287,307 268,391 265,380 18,916 18,901 9,823 bushels: 23,401,225 21,883,351 (D) 1,517,874 1,516,074 763,540 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 346 321 318 25 22 24 acres: 121,344 114,114 (D) 7,230 7,215 2,284 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 39 32 32 7 4 20 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 100 96 95 4 4 4 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 115 103 98 12 12 1 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 120 114 114 6 6 1 500 acres or more .........................................: 166 157 156 9 9 4 : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 1,076 969 960 107 93 183 acres: 370,540 325,455 319,790 45,085 36,859 19,681 tons, dry equivalent: 1,542,301 1,316,200 1,280,213 226,101 172,429 50,862 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 893 799 790 94 84 112 acres: 293,735 251,740 246,175 41,995 35,225 12,256 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 158 145 143 13 13 81 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 258 226 225 32 29 57 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1,560 1,026 230 211 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 703 393 121 116 500 acres or more .........................................: 672 264 196 189 : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 7,480 5,751 709 654 acres: 1,047,568 507,379 247,013 235,693 tons, dry: 3,926,331 1,801,373 973,823 933,884 Irrigated ............................................farms: 6,466 4,996 607 556 acres: 870,101 419,513 217,431 209,032 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 3,303 2,623 275 249 acres: 251,158 137,837 55,820 52,940 tons, dry: 582,333 296,830 153,803 145,756 Irrigated ............................................farms: 1,993 1,553 192 171 acres: 131,135 65,470 30,965 29,394 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 187 87 25 24 acres: 56,098 17,673 10,181 (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 79 32 9 8 acres: 14,585 (D) 1,209 (D) : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 1,235 744 178 171 acres: 334,276 67,107 154,176 153,577 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,232 742 178 171 acres: 334,263 (D) 154,176 153,577 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 527 451 23 20 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 126 75 16 16 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 194 104 25 22 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 132 56 15 15 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 256 58 99 98 : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 195 155 8 8 acres: 5,237 (D) 555 555 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 14 3 3 acres: 767 (D) 421 421 : Peas, green ............................................farms: 105 74 5 5 acres: 1,972 921 73 73 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 4 2 - - acres: 190 (D) - - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 529 228 132 131 acres: 301,157 55,034 150,403 (D) Harvested for processing .............................farms: 220 70 79 78 acres: 139,548 (D) 74,013 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 118 101 1 1 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: 20 9 6 6 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 90 40 19 19 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 78 30 11 11 250.0 acres or more .....................................: 223 48 95 94 : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 221 163 10 10 acres: 3,282 2,213 87 87 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 12 6 6 acres: 344 185 (D) (D) Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 10 10 - - acres: 1 1 - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - acres: - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 215 177 9 6 acres: 62 38 11 10 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 16 15 1 1 acres: 3 (D) (D) (D) : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 567 494 23 20 acres: 5,523 3,831 542 542 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 565 492 23 20 acres: (D) (D) 542 542 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 495 449 14 11 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 57 39 7 7 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 10 5 1 1 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 4 1 1 1 : Apples .................................................farms: 320 279 12 9 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,936 1,528 (D) (D) : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 137 109 10 10 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,175 507 (D) (D) : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 132 110 2 2 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,009 815 (D) (D) : Almonds ................................................farms: 8 5 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 2 2 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 285 274 272 11 11 19 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 172 144 144 28 24 17 500 acres or more .........................................: 203 180 176 23 16 9 : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 898 813 805 85 80 122 acres: 280,563 248,630 244,329 31,933 31,277 12,613 tons, dry: 1,112,807 965,534 934,452 147,273 146,345 38,328 Irrigated ............................................farms: 772 694 686 78 77 91 acres: 223,705 192,228 187,927 31,477 (D) 9,452 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 331 296 290 35 28 74 acres: 51,380 45,241 43,877 6,139 4,629 6,121 tons, dry: 121,023 105,010 101,212 16,013 9,403 10,677 Irrigated ............................................farms: 221 196 191 25 22 27 acres: 32,303 28,596 (D) 3,707 3,497 2,397 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 72 68 68 4 4 3 acres: 28,177 26,428 26,428 1,749 1,749 67 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 37 36 36 1 1 1 acres: (D) 9,352 9,352 (D) (D) (D) : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 296 273 267 23 22 17 acres: 112,137 102,728 (D) 9,409 (D) 856 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 295 272 266 23 22 17 acres: (D) (D) (D) 9,409 (D) 856 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 47 42 42 5 5 6 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 30 30 28 - - 5 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 60 51 48 9 9 5 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 61 59 59 2 2 - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 98 91 90 7 6 1 : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 32 30 30 2 2 - acres: (D) 3,406 3,406 (D) (D) - Harvested for processing .............................farms: 2 2 2 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 20 18 18 2 2 6 acres: (D) 946 946 (D) (D) (D) Harvested for processing .............................farms: 2 2 2 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 161 146 142 15 14 8 acres: 95,101 85,950 (D) 9,151 (D) 619 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 70 65 64 5 5 1 acres: 39,988 35,598 (D) 4,390 4,390 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 16 16 16 - - - 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - 5 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 29 23 20 6 6 2 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 37 35 35 2 2 - 250.0 acres or more .....................................: 79 72 71 7 6 1 : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 42 37 37 5 5 6 acres: 861 606 606 255 255 121 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 1 1 1 - - - acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 24 22 22 2 2 5 acres: 10 (D) (D) (D) (D) 3 Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 33 31 31 2 2 17 acres: (D) 740 740 (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 33 31 31 2 2 17 acres: (D) 740 740 (D) (D) (D) Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 21 20 20 1 1 11 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 6 5 5 1 1 5 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 4 4 4 - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 1 1 - - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 1 1 1 - - 1 : Apples .................................................farms: 16 15 15 1 1 13 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) 223 223 (D) (D) 170 : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 16 14 14 2 2 2 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) 139 139 (D) (D) (D) : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 13 12 12 1 1 7 bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) 112 112 (D) (D) (D) : Almonds ................................................farms: 3 3 3 - - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 1 1 1 - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 74. Summary by Legal Status For Tax Purposes: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Partnership : : :---------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : Registered : : Family or : : under Item : Total : individual : Total : State law -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in orchards - Con. : : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 22 21 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 19 (D) - - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 268 225 11 11 acres: 207 177 13 13 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Corporation : :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: Other - estate or : : Family held : Other than family held :trust, prison farm, : :---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------:grazing association, : : : 10 or less : : 10 or less : American Indian Item : Total : Total : stockholders : Total : stockholders : Reservation, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in orchards - Con. : : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 1 1 1 - - - bearing and nonbearing acres: (D) (D) (D) - - - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 25 20 20 5 5 7 acres: 14 11 11 4 4 3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included with total farm production expenses. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. 3/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..........................................number: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - percent: 100.0 7.3 3.4 1.8 2.4 32.3 - Land in farms ...................................acres: 11,547,963 2,129,103 1,018,856 16,946 26,306 3,002,761 - Average size of farm ........................acres: 505 1,267 1,328 42 47 406 - : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ...........................................farms: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - $1,000: 11,024,607 1,066,180 1,908,129 35,124 124,474 1,687,216 - Average per farm ..........................dollars: 481,908 634,253 2,487,782 87,592 224,278 228,156 - : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 .................................: 5,317 14 20 67 74 1,329 - $1,000 to $2,499 .................................: 2,873 16 40 53 38 1,078 - $2,500 to $4,999 .................................: 2,357 40 49 55 38 849 - $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: 2,526 58 99 75 66 859 - $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................: 2,368 126 77 78 86 820 - : $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................: 1,551 148 38 35 74 555 - $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................: 1,228 167 23 22 34 444 - $100,000 to $249,999 .............................: 1,415 256 42 7 56 483 - $250,000 to $499,999 .............................: 1,102 311 64 5 28 357 - : $500,000 to $999,999 .............................: 778 247 66 1 34 249 - $1,000,000 or more ...............................: 1,362 298 249 3 27 372 - $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .......................: 639 210 71 2 13 195 - $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .......................: 373 70 71 - 12 137 - $5,000,000 or more .............................: 350 18 107 1 2 40 - : Total sales ...................................farms: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - $1,000: 10,892,201 1,022,216 1,898,824 34,730 124,133 1,654,286 - Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry : peas .......................................farms: 3,530 1,675 385 16 21 1,028 - $1,000: 1,626,831 822,249 358,550 (D) (D) 382,550 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 2,497 1,237 338 1 3 734 - $1,000: 1,607,176 813,367 358,150 (D) (D) 376,614 - Corn ......................................farms: 1,117 491 129 9 1 323 - $1,000: 405,868 214,738 67,040 (D) (D) 92,480 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 788 353 78 1 - 254 - $1,000: 398,382 211,591 (D) (D) - 90,905 - Wheat .....................................farms: 2,203 1,139 293 2 20 582 - $1,000: 744,115 384,864 190,487 (D) (D) 148,376 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 1,538 822 251 1 3 395 - $1,000: 730,200 378,058 189,617 (D) (D) 144,592 - Soybeans ..................................farms: 8 5 - - - 3 - $1,000: 135 (D) - - - (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sorghum ...................................farms: 6 5 - - - - - $1,000: 337 (D) - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 2 1 - - - - - $1,000: (D) (D) - - - - - Barley ....................................farms: 1,319 545 158 1 5 442 - $1,000: 349,414 132,687 85,617 (D) (D) 120,682 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 838 362 130 - 3 303 - $1,000: 341,143 129,230 85,161 - 593 118,251 - Rice ......................................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .................................farms: 771 475 74 7 2 174 - $1,000: 126,961 (D) 15,405 (D) (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 479 330 40 1 - 103 - $1,000: 121,065 86,176 (D) (D) - 19,452 - Tobacco .....................................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .......................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ...................................farms: 1,231 63 756 28 68 270 - $1,000: 1,597,035 24,412 1,379,914 2,231 523 174,080 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 679 38 438 3 1 190 - $1,000: 1,591,765 24,004 1,376,647 (D) (D) 173,147 - : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ..............farms: 561 2 61 363 32 52 - $1,000: 31,693 (D) 274 30,748 (D) 402 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 38 - 1 35 - 2 - $1,000: 27,916 - (D) 27,635 - (D) - Fruits and tree nuts ......................farms: 446 2 41 308 24 31 - $1,000: 29,683 (D) 128 29,114 (D) 248 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 29 - - 27 - 2 - $1,000: 26,766 - - (D) - (D) - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..........................................number: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 percent: - 32.3 30.1 0.6 1.5 0.8 2.6 4.8 12.5 Land in farms ...................................acres: - 3,002,761 3,495,391 192,557 358,975 6,377 11,281 260,590 1,028,820 Average size of farm ........................acres: - 406 508 1,459 1,075 36 19 239 360 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ...........................................farms: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 $1,000: - 1,687,216 872,994 952,272 4,143,433 23,373 39,243 46,393 125,776 Average per farm ..........................dollars: - 228,156 126,833 7,214,179 12,405,487 130,575 65,297 42,485 44,024 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 .................................: - 1,329 1,568 - 36 10 12 380 1,807 $1,000 to $2,499 .................................: - 1,078 739 - - 58 392 285 174 $2,500 to $4,999 .................................: - 849 849 1 1 54 127 153 141 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: - 859 907 2 2 33 41 127 257 $10,000 to $24,999 ...............................: - 820 853 21 9 8 12 82 196 : $25,000 to $49,999 ...............................: - 555 538 23 2 4 6 28 100 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................: - 444 432 24 - 6 - 8 68 $100,000 to $249,999 .............................: - 483 494 16 12 - 2 3 44 $250,000 to $499,999 .............................: - 357 273 14 19 2 3 6 20 : $500,000 to $999,999 .............................: - 249 119 7 24 2 - 7 22 $1,000,000 or more ...............................: - 372 111 24 229 2 6 13 28 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 .......................: - 195 64 3 46 1 4 7 23 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 .......................: - 137 27 3 45 - - 5 3 $5,000,000 or more .............................: - 40 20 18 138 1 2 1 2 : Total sales ...................................farms: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 $1,000: - 1,654,286 845,740 950,344 4,133,539 23,224 39,237 44,122 121,807 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry : peas .......................................farms: - 1,028 243 12 107 2 - 14 27 $1,000: - 382,550 23,772 9,358 25,484 (D) - 1,631 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 734 96 8 67 1 - 5 7 $1,000: - 376,614 20,926 9,246 24,645 (D) - 1,590 (D) Corn ......................................farms: - 323 99 10 41 - - 4 10 $1,000: - 92,480 15,132 3,664 11,253 - - (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 254 60 7 29 - - 2 4 $1,000: - 90,905 14,099 3,645 10,794 - - (D) (D) Wheat .....................................farms: - 582 100 6 46 2 - 3 10 $1,000: - 148,376 5,199 (D) 10,300 (D) - (D) 230 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 395 26 3 32 1 - 2 2 $1,000: - 144,592 3,538 (D) 9,953 (D) - (D) (D) Soybeans ..................................farms: - 3 - - - - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sorghum ...................................farms: - - - - 1 - - - - $1,000: - - - - (D) - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - 1 - - - - $1,000: - - - - (D) - - - - Barley ....................................farms: - 442 91 5 54 1 - 8 9 $1,000: - 120,682 3,103 2,245 3,611 (D) - (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 303 18 3 16 1 - 1 1 $1,000: - 118,251 2,084 (D) 2,954 (D) - (D) (D) Rice ......................................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .................................farms: - 174 23 3 8 - - 3 2 $1,000: - (D) 338 (D) (D) - - (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 103 2 1 1 - - 1 - $1,000: - 19,452 (D) (D) (D) - - (D) - Tobacco .....................................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .......................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ...................................farms: - 270 13 1 6 - 6 3 17 $1,000: - 174,080 (D) (D) 13,320 - 10 11 220 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 190 2 1 5 - - - 1 $1,000: - 173,147 (D) (D) (D) - - - (D) : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ..............farms: - 52 17 1 1 - 9 6 17 $1,000: - 402 28 (D) (D) - 16 (D) 92 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 2 - - - - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - - - - Fruits and tree nuts ......................farms: - 31 13 - 1 - 8 3 15 $1,000: - 248 25 - (D) - (D) (D) 70 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - 2 - - - - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries - Con. : : Berries ...................................farms: 234 - 39 123 19 31 - $1,000: 2,010 - 146 1,635 38 154 - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 7 - - 7 - - - $1,000: 943 - - 943 - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ........................................farms: 599 1 70 11 464 28 - $1,000: 122,254 (D) 1,444 (D) 120,070 478 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 183 - 1 - 178 3 - $1,000: 117,897 - (D) - 116,603 (D) - Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .......................farms: 47 - - 1 44 2 - $1,000: 673 - - (D) 659 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 2 - - - 2 - - $1,000: (D) - - - (D) - - Cultivated Christmas trees ................farms: 47 - - 1 44 2 - $1,000: 673 - - (D) 659 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: 2 - - - 2 - - $1,000: (D) - - - (D) - - Short rotation woody crops ................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Other crops and hay .........................farms: 7,813 704 252 49 36 5,413 - $1,000: 1,386,308 145,725 151,702 794 357 1,021,276 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 2,501 425 171 2 3 1,702 - $1,000: 1,335,712 141,009 150,641 (D) (D) 985,680 - Maple syrup ...............................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ...........................farms: 7,630 297 76 15 19 1,011 - $1,000: 2,175,548 27,381 6,607 121 1,063 69,574 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 2,047 127 19 1 7 221 - $1,000: 2,114,032 24,304 5,790 (D) (D) 59,545 - Milk from cows ..............................farms: 330 1 3 - - 3 - $1,000: 3,727,378 (D) 52 - - (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 295 - - - - 2 - $1,000: 3,727,100 - - - - (D) - Hogs and pigs ...............................farms: 663 11 12 7 8 50 - $1,000: 23,779 211 (D) (D) (D) 214 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 18 3 - - - - - $1,000: 22,239 184 - - - - - Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk ........farms: 1,454 28 29 15 6 108 - $1,000: 46,709 1,866 77 34 152 816 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 50 4 - - - 1 - $1,000: 40,891 (D) - - - (D) - Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys ................................farms: 1,028 18 5 2 - 88 - $1,000: 12,951 127 (D) (D) - (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 54 - - - - 1 - $1,000: 4,770 - - - - (D) - Poultry and eggs ............................farms: 1,751 17 55 54 31 145 - $1,000: 40,298 (D) 168 46 43 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 15 3 1 - - - - $1,000: 37,584 (D) (D) - - - - Aquaculture .................................farms: 51 - - - - 1 - $1,000: 76,464 - - - - (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 39 - - - - - - $1,000: 76,279 - - - - - - Other animals and other animal : products ...................................farms: 585 11 14 23 14 60 - $1,000: 24,281 5 2 6 7 203 - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: 65 - - - - 1 - $1,000: 22,371 - - - - (D) - : Value of- : Government payments ...........................farms: 4,296 683 125 15 39 2,008 - $1,000: 132,405 43,964 9,304 395 341 32,930 - : Landlord's share of total sales ...............farms: 719 310 54 3 4 235 - $1,000: 99,099 50,426 11,194 (D) (D) 33,324 - : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers .....................................farms: 1,499 21 167 153 88 151 - $1,000: 20,984 786 6,329 5,569 1,258 1,124 - : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products .........farms: 638 36 91 36 37 48 - $1,000: 57,669 5,282 24,523 4,298 720 4,953 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries - Con. : : Berries ...................................farms: - 31 5 1 - - 2 5 9 $1,000: - 154 3 (D) - - (D) 8 23 Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ........................................farms: - 28 6 - - 3 8 1 7 $1,000: - 478 (D) - - (D) 7 (D) 102 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 3 - - - - - - 1 $1,000: - (D) - - - - - - (D) Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .......................farms: - 2 - - - - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Cultivated Christmas trees ................farms: - 2 - - - - - - - $1,000: - (D) - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Short rotation woody crops ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Other crops and hay .........................farms: - 5,413 856 27 52 20 39 72 293 $1,000: - 1,021,276 29,761 6,066 26,962 (D) (D) 999 2,142 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 1,702 126 13 42 1 2 4 10 $1,000: - 985,680 22,273 5,947 26,742 (D) (D) 761 1,326 Maple syrup ...............................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ................farms: - - - - - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - - - - - : Cattle and calves ...........................farms: - 1,011 5,387 132 302 16 41 44 290 $1,000: - 69,574 765,731 929,565 367,080 212 85 2,087 6,040 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 221 1,325 82 238 1 - 5 21 $1,000: - 59,545 722,739 928,335 365,723 (D) - (D) 4,492 Milk from cows ..............................farms: - 3 14 2 301 - 2 2 2 $1,000: - (D) 20,452 (D) 3,700,077 - (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 2 6 1 284 - - - 2 $1,000: - (D) 20,419 (D) 3,699,914 - - - (D) Hogs and pigs ...............................farms: - 50 180 2 10 179 57 48 99 $1,000: - 214 259 (D) 102 22,477 58 (D) 352 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - 1 12 - - 2 $1,000: - - - - (D) (D) - - (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk ........farms: - 108 203 5 15 14 68 818 145 $1,000: - 816 2,263 (D) 104 (D) 54 38,421 2,447 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 1 5 1 1 - - 33 5 $1,000: - (D) (D) (D) (D) - - 34,637 2,232 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys ................................farms: - 88 185 5 5 - 8 18 694 $1,000: - (D) 2,274 (D) 26 - 10 (D) 9,693 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 1 10 1 - - - - 42 $1,000: - (D) (D) (D) - - - - 3,606 Poultry and eggs ............................farms: - 145 340 1 15 54 591 195 253 $1,000: - (D) 350 (D) (D) 66 38,710 135 332 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - - - 11 - - $1,000: - - - - - - 37,331 - - Aquaculture .................................farms: - 1 - - - - - 3 47 $1,000: - (D) - - - - - (D) 76,463 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - - - - - - - - 39 $1,000: - - - - - - - - 76,279 Other animals and other animal : products ...................................farms: - 60 93 2 2 5 18 32 311 $1,000: - 203 (D) (D) (D) 5 (D) (D) 22,211 Sales of $50,000 or more ..................farms: - 1 - 1 2 - - 1 60 $1,000: - (D) - (D) (D) - - (D) 20,594 : Value of- : Government payments ...........................farms: - 2,008 1,011 43 207 9 6 49 101 $1,000: - 32,930 27,253 1,928 9,894 149 6 2,272 3,969 : Landlord's share of total sales ...............farms: - 235 92 4 3 8 1 2 3 $1,000: - 33,324 2,714 (D) 160 9 (D) (D) 5 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers .....................................farms: - 151 445 9 10 30 136 149 140 $1,000: - 1,124 3,821 432 149 166 178 523 649 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products .........farms: - 48 209 6 13 6 30 84 42 $1,000: - 4,953 5,163 776 4,298 14 81 865 6,697 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ...............farms: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - $1,000: 9,317,904 903,688 1,541,549 32,400 94,462 1,410,015 - Average per farm ..........................dollars: 407,304 537,590 2,009,843 80,799 170,201 190,671 - : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ....................................farms: 9,896 1,584 636 214 332 3,238 - $1,000: 765,559 186,842 287,434 718 3,104 211,782 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 5,657 283 227 201 262 1,658 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 1,673 387 54 8 32 682 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 636 228 43 3 15 216 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,930 686 312 2 23 682 - : Chemicals purchased ...........................farms: 10,419 1,608 596 238 325 3,447 - $1,000: 410,258 85,397 189,873 1,346 1,638 92,893 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 7,344 500 203 212 266 2,380 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 1,444 512 79 20 38 519 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 523 221 46 1 11 186 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,108 375 268 5 10 362 - : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .....farms: 7,732 1,494 766 170 548 2,404 - $1,000: 378,944 69,441 164,468 1,418 17,821 83,842 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: 2,522 92 232 100 197 664 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 1,881 245 145 56 164 674 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 1,602 541 97 7 103 532 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 515 197 33 5 34 163 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,212 419 259 2 50 371 - : Cover crop seed purchased ...................farms: 1,065 130 118 38 50 419 - $1,000: 4,094 960 972 20 19 1,337 - : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased .....farms: 6,503 158 82 49 38 771 - $1,000: 722,700 5,155 682 85 99 18,890 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 4,196 57 69 46 33 489 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 1,502 56 6 2 5 211 - $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: 476 35 6 1 - 36 - $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: 140 8 1 - - 19 - $250,000 or more ...............................: 189 2 - - - 16 - : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ......farms: 3,243 112 37 5 8 417 - $1,000: 121,882 1,878 577 36 54 5,443 - Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .....................................farms: 4,301 71 54 48 32 456 - $1,000: 600,818 3,277 106 49 45 13,447 - : Feed purchased ................................farms: 13,525 359 180 113 99 1,513 - $1,000: 2,598,813 6,467 3,987 180 520 16,154 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 8,387 159 143 102 76 1,129 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 3,621 139 30 11 19 310 - $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: 912 48 4 - 4 66 - $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: 207 12 - - - 3 - $250,000 or more ...............................: 398 1 3 - - 5 - : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...........farms: 21,557 1,626 728 381 512 6,753 - $1,000: 395,457 62,347 81,666 1,175 4,181 96,519 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 15,681 465 332 337 385 4,956 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 3,613 557 124 39 87 1,108 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 862 257 41 2 14 260 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,401 347 231 3 26 429 - : Utilities .....................................farms: 15,852 1,499 659 284 450 4,669 - $1,000: 357,174 47,383 82,795 1,089 2,694 96,890 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: 4,788 125 124 151 147 1,263 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 6,414 460 158 105 168 1,885 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 2,982 548 106 23 116 928 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 605 161 64 2 10 209 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,063 205 207 3 9 384 - : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ......farms: 18,678 1,598 687 327 477 5,679 - $1,000: 632,154 88,237 116,038 2,269 7,653 153,635 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 11,397 382 258 274 323 3,410 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 4,430 467 141 44 93 1,337 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 1,046 269 50 4 33 341 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,805 480 238 5 28 591 - : Hired farm labor ..............................farms: 5,697 907 441 91 221 1,764 - $1,000: 1,043,118 99,756 198,425 17,765 37,617 188,615 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 1,583 108 33 34 29 491 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 1,302 164 71 23 44 483 - $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: 1,427 381 98 18 65 424 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ...............farms: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 $1,000: - 1,410,015 780,702 819,537 3,454,471 22,242 34,489 51,441 172,909 Average per farm ..........................dollars: - 190,671 113,425 6,208,616 10,342,727 124,256 57,385 47,107 60,521 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ....................................farms: - 3,238 2,384 52 223 33 139 261 800 $1,000: - 211,782 17,325 3,123 51,634 80 114 1,570 1,833 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 1,658 1,823 20 30 29 137 245 742 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 682 383 14 54 2 2 9 46 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 216 95 2 28 2 - 1 3 $50,000 or more ................................: - 682 83 16 111 - - 6 9 : Chemicals purchased ...........................farms: - 3,447 2,518 61 229 27 151 304 915 $1,000: - 92,893 6,199 1,328 30,446 27 64 394 651 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 2,380 2,318 41 62 25 150 296 891 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 519 160 10 74 2 1 5 24 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 186 19 5 34 - - - - $50,000 or more ................................: - 362 21 5 59 - - 3 - : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .....farms: - 2,404 1,411 36 199 24 160 219 301 $1,000: - 83,842 6,707 1,825 32,357 42 90 450 481 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: - 664 695 4 11 13 135 178 201 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 674 430 15 12 9 24 32 75 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 532 230 7 54 2 1 5 23 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 163 42 2 36 - - 2 1 $50,000 or more ................................: - 371 14 8 86 - - 2 1 : Cover crop seed purchased ...................farms: - 419 174 2 22 4 26 20 62 $1,000: - 1,337 330 (D) 338 1 (D) 23 47 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased .....farms: - 771 3,269 89 157 137 344 525 884 $1,000: - 18,890 197,006 383,456 96,074 (D) (D) 4,516 7,895 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 489 1,943 25 36 125 322 451 600 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 211 870 30 27 9 15 54 217 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: - 36 301 10 17 2 3 9 56 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: - 19 78 3 14 - 1 9 7 $250,000 or more ...............................: - 16 77 21 63 1 3 2 4 : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ......farms: - 417 1,740 44 138 58 77 322 285 $1,000: - 5,443 48,227 1,470 51,919 (D) (D) 2,256 2,598 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .....................................farms: - 456 2,037 59 46 118 317 316 747 $1,000: - 13,447 148,779 381,986 44,155 237 1,182 2,260 5,296 : Feed purchased ................................farms: - 1,513 6,624 131 334 175 571 1,041 2,385 $1,000: - 16,154 234,260 338,956 1,904,591 6,298 13,166 14,517 59,716 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 1,129 3,873 35 38 115 473 720 1,524 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 310 1,933 40 24 48 87 279 701 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: - 66 606 22 15 8 6 26 107 $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: - 3 113 9 34 1 1 5 29 $250,000 or more ...............................: - 5 99 25 223 3 4 11 24 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...........farms: - 6,753 6,630 129 330 176 574 1,028 2,690 $1,000: - 96,519 36,108 7,725 92,152 457 1,369 3,477 8,281 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 4,956 5,138 63 50 158 522 952 2,323 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 1,108 1,196 32 53 14 40 56 307 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 260 190 4 29 3 8 9 45 $50,000 or more ................................: - 429 106 30 198 1 4 11 15 : Utilities .....................................farms: - 4,669 4,842 117 315 163 346 700 1,808 $1,000: - 96,890 21,959 5,448 88,444 1,029 1,050 1,830 6,562 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: - 1,263 1,711 17 8 63 125 357 697 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 1,885 2,137 44 29 90 195 286 857 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 928 862 32 66 7 21 48 225 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 209 95 7 31 2 2 7 15 $50,000 or more ................................: - 384 37 17 181 1 3 2 14 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ......farms: - 5,679 5,779 120 316 147 469 859 2,220 $1,000: - 153,635 48,418 9,097 186,769 1,039 1,768 3,961 13,269 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 3,410 3,873 36 32 128 395 721 1,565 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 1,337 1,487 45 32 15 69 123 577 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 341 248 15 26 2 2 9 47 $50,000 or more ................................: - 591 171 24 226 2 3 6 31 : Hired farm labor ..............................farms: - 1,764 1,243 57 269 26 74 143 461 $1,000: - 188,615 56,796 26,407 370,072 2,825 6,485 6,238 32,118 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 491 491 9 9 18 53 93 215 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 483 367 9 7 - 12 22 100 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: - 424 278 16 42 1 4 13 87 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Hired farm labor - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: 639 185 63 12 35 191 - $250,000 or more ...............................: 746 69 176 4 48 175 - : Contract labor ................................farms: 2,547 248 224 70 95 904 - $1,000: 101,956 8,070 30,888 1,133 1,830 32,751 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: 452 15 20 20 17 154 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 752 56 23 23 30 275 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 753 103 56 18 29 273 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 256 39 32 4 12 83 - $50,000 or more ................................: 334 35 93 5 7 119 - : Customwork and custom hauling .................farms: 5,857 867 258 42 47 2,213 - $1,000: 247,148 32,197 34,810 1,025 540 50,087 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: 1,290 60 8 26 19 421 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 1,893 161 55 7 8 778 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 1,497 374 51 5 11 588 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 401 115 27 3 7 161 - $50,000 or more ................................: 776 157 117 1 2 265 - : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees .........................................farms: 5,471 955 360 21 99 1,520 - $1,000: 550,451 100,016 163,275 499 4,280 166,671 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 2,036 148 40 12 37 465 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 590 73 31 2 5 156 - $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 871 171 41 2 15 237 - $25,000 or more ................................: 1,974 563 248 5 42 662 - : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ........farms: 1,821 332 152 18 65 609 - $1,000: 80,056 12,064 26,450 165 648 20,036 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: 408 25 20 7 31 111 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 436 52 14 7 20 165 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 516 131 20 3 9 175 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 151 43 17 - - 68 - $50,000 or more ................................: 310 81 81 1 5 90 - : Interest expense ..............................farms: 6,805 932 397 93 170 1,913 - $1,000: 286,045 30,277 42,182 1,153 2,143 60,858 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 2,537 226 107 44 86 676 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 2,688 374 93 39 66 754 - $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: 1,113 262 120 8 17 364 - $100,000 or more ...............................: 467 70 77 2 1 119 - : Secured by real estate ......................farms: 4,788 586 249 67 102 1,357 - $1,000: 188,811 17,691 20,250 857 1,461 41,705 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 429 55 3 11 15 112 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 1,138 96 47 11 26 305 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 2,184 245 93 36 51 592 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 452 97 35 7 4 164 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 585 93 71 2 6 184 - : Not secured by real estate ..................farms: 4,230 657 269 49 100 1,186 - $1,000: 97,234 12,586 21,932 296 681 19,153 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: 780 67 44 9 16 223 - $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: 1,752 182 57 31 69 471 - $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: 1,098 262 53 7 8 362 - $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: 288 92 47 1 2 64 - $50,000 or more ..............................: 312 54 68 1 5 66 - : Property taxes paid ...........................farms: 21,486 1,486 708 379 510 7,025 - $1,000: 128,588 13,869 16,449 1,157 1,532 36,295 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 17,581 780 429 336 434 5,702 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 2,036 330 79 33 51 714 - $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 1,125 278 84 7 17 368 - $25,000 or more ................................: 744 98 116 3 8 241 - : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock ................................farms: 9,388 288 105 51 42 1,273 - $1,000: 172,113 1,540 245 21 68 5,538 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 7,856 202 95 51 36 1,101 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 1,128 75 9 - 6 137 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 143 8 - - - 22 - $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 91 3 1 - - 8 - $100,000 or more ...............................: 170 - - - - 5 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Hired farm labor - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $100,000 to $249,999 ...........................: - 191 78 6 29 5 2 8 25 $250,000 or more ...............................: - 175 29 17 182 2 3 7 34 : Contract labor ................................farms: - 904 562 16 59 6 34 59 270 $1,000: - 32,751 5,133 1,176 15,997 (D) (D) 1,415 2,642 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: - 154 127 2 3 2 7 11 74 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 275 194 1 2 2 20 23 103 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 273 187 2 8 1 6 16 54 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 83 38 4 13 - - 3 28 $50,000 or more ................................: - 119 16 7 33 1 1 6 11 : Customwork and custom hauling .................farms: - 2,213 1,421 40 213 20 46 130 560 $1,000: - 50,087 14,331 4,040 104,824 (D) (D) 969 1,978 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: - 421 399 4 5 13 25 78 232 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 778 537 9 7 5 18 35 273 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 588 369 10 36 - 1 10 42 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 161 57 2 19 - - 3 7 $50,000 or more ................................: - 265 59 15 146 2 2 4 6 : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees .........................................farms: - 1,520 1,828 66 162 28 18 96 318 $1,000: - 166,671 30,874 6,887 71,265 (D) (D) 3,469 2,715 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 465 991 30 8 19 15 58 213 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: - 156 250 5 13 2 1 12 40 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: - 237 328 12 19 3 1 9 33 $25,000 or more ................................: - 662 259 19 122 4 1 17 32 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ........farms: - 609 325 8 60 14 23 28 187 $1,000: - 20,036 2,649 1,074 15,043 143 52 137 1,596 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 .....................................: - 111 96 - - 3 17 10 88 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 165 109 1 7 10 1 10 40 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 175 100 2 10 - 5 7 54 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 68 13 1 8 - - 1 - $50,000 or more ................................: - 90 7 4 35 1 - - 5 : Interest expense ..............................farms: - 1,913 1,932 56 233 44 119 219 697 $1,000: - 60,858 33,990 5,342 99,500 231 560 2,547 7,261 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 676 876 16 24 21 74 92 295 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 754 782 15 43 23 45 114 340 $25,000 to $99,999 .............................: - 364 215 16 42 - - 9 60 $100,000 or more ...............................: - 119 59 9 124 - - 4 2 : Secured by real estate ......................farms: - 1,357 1,369 41 178 34 79 182 544 $1,000: - 41,705 25,125 1,047 72,451 190 362 2,015 5,657 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: - 112 155 1 5 7 14 5 46 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: - 305 372 13 10 6 32 65 155 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: - 592 660 14 37 21 33 104 298 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: - 164 84 8 19 - - 4 30 $50,000 or more ..............................: - 184 98 5 107 - - 4 15 : Not secured by real estate ..................farms: - 1,186 1,189 33 161 20 76 106 384 $1,000: - 19,153 8,866 4,295 27,048 41 198 532 1,605 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ...................................: - 223 298 2 5 2 7 31 76 $1,000 to $4,999 .............................: - 471 535 2 22 18 59 64 242 $5,000 to $24,999 ............................: - 362 286 15 32 - 10 6 57 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................: - 64 42 5 27 - - 3 5 $50,000 or more ..............................: - 66 28 9 75 - - 2 4 : Property taxes paid ...........................farms: - 7,025 6,435 126 330 169 587 1,033 2,698 $1,000: - 36,295 22,552 701 23,295 344 1,660 2,394 8,339 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 5,702 5,596 87 104 159 550 954 2,450 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: - 714 516 19 47 7 25 64 151 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: - 368 215 16 50 3 10 10 67 $25,000 or more ................................: - 241 108 4 129 - 2 5 30 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock ................................farms: - 1,273 4,448 112 313 115 290 794 1,557 $1,000: - 5,538 21,989 12,618 121,753 629 1,909 1,071 4,732 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 1,101 3,762 67 51 111 276 766 1,338 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 137 583 20 65 2 12 19 200 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 22 64 9 26 1 - 8 5 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: - 8 22 2 45 - 1 - 9 $100,000 or more ...............................: - 5 17 14 126 1 1 1 5 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : All other production expenses .................farms: 12,433 1,469 592 179 361 3,782 - $1,000: 447,370 54,631 101,881 1,201 8,092 78,557 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: 7,586 376 202 143 211 2,343 - $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: 2,987 564 144 25 85 923 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 634 188 54 8 23 207 - $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: 642 243 40 1 21 188 - $100,000 or more ...............................: 584 98 152 2 21 121 - : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ........farms: 867 306 59 4 3 283 - $1,000: 36,781 20,125 (D) (D) 1 8,353 - : Depreciation expenses claimed ...................farms: 15,202 1,554 727 274 439 5,121 - $1,000: 892,639 120,835 132,489 2,865 9,824 240,785 - : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations ..............farms: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - $1,000: 2,034,090 225,242 400,094 4,757 34,439 391,661 - Average per farm ..........................dollars: 88,914 133,993 521,635 11,863 62,052 52,963 - : Farms with net gains 2/ ......................number: 8,958 1,145 498 192 314 3,759 - Average net gain ........................dollars: 275,011 248,081 892,124 44,745 140,323 136,153 - : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: 625 20 17 19 24 296 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 1,519 51 56 66 63 774 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 841 59 36 33 34 374 - $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 1,326 121 21 40 51 599 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 1,020 166 36 19 35 424 - $50,000 or more ................................: 3,627 728 332 15 107 1,292 - : Farms with net losses ........................number: 13,919 536 269 209 241 3,636 - Average net loss ........................dollars: 30,854 109,721 164,252 18,345 39,928 33,041 - : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: 848 17 16 28 29 404 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 3,810 72 60 60 52 1,264 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 2,928 37 42 59 27 678 - $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 3,582 99 65 32 75 667 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 1,445 81 14 12 14 295 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,306 230 72 18 44 328 - : Net cash farm income of producers ...............farms: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - $1,000: 1,897,116 194,942 393,946 4,673 34,242 366,154 - Average per farm ..........................dollars: 82,927 115,968 513,619 11,652 61,697 49,514 - : Producers reporting net gains 2/ ..............farms: 8,919 1,124 495 191 311 3,747 - Average net gain ........................dollars: 263,468 234,632 889,431 44,487 141,265 132,560 - : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: 636 26 17 19 24 297 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 1,511 46 56 66 60 778 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 846 53 37 32 34 374 - $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 1,342 130 22 40 51 602 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 994 153 34 19 35 417 - $50,000 or more ................................: 3,590 716 329 15 107 1,279 - : Producers reporting net losses ................farms: 13,958 557 272 210 244 3,648 - Average net loss ........................dollars: 32,437 123,491 170,303 18,212 39,721 35,787 - : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: 843 19 16 28 29 403 - $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: 3,827 68 57 60 52 1,272 - $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: 2,922 38 42 61 27 676 - $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: 3,574 105 68 31 78 661 - $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: 1,453 83 15 12 14 297 - $50,000 or more ................................: 1,339 244 74 18 44 339 - : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...........................................farms: 39 23 4 - - 5 - $1,000: 5,255 4,106 864 - - 200 - : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ..........farms: 7,733 1,013 335 111 143 2,829 - $1,000: 327,387 62,751 33,515 2,033 4,426 114,459 - : Customwork and other agricultural services ....farms: 1,707 301 102 20 23 763 - $1,000: 65,446 16,566 4,309 58 177 31,132 - : Gross cash rent or share payments .............farms: 3,629 377 128 69 47 1,481 - $1,000: 116,760 19,463 13,576 537 537 48,887 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : : All other production expenses .................farms: - 3,782 3,550 104 304 69 220 464 1,339 $1,000: - 78,557 24,405 10,334 150,254 1,067 1,622 2,486 12,839 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ...................................: - 2,343 2,519 50 41 61 187 406 1,047 $5,000 to $24,999 ..............................: - 923 847 25 62 4 27 44 237 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 207 97 5 32 1 3 5 11 $50,000 to $99,999 .............................: - 188 65 9 52 2 - 2 19 $100,000 or more ...............................: - 121 22 15 117 1 3 7 25 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ........farms: - 283 145 5 11 1 2 8 40 $1,000: - 8,353 1,629 (D) 890 (D) (D) 23 163 : Depreciation expenses claimed ...................farms: - 5,121 4,518 98 295 80 242 395 1,459 $1,000: - 240,785 88,263 18,902 250,011 1,813 2,710 4,795 19,347 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations ..............farms: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 $1,000: - 391,661 132,812 141,356 703,117 1,445 5,703 -1,209 -5,326 Average per farm ..........................dollars: - 52,963 19,296 1,070,876 2,105,140 8,073 9,489 -1,107 -1,864 : Farms with net gains 2/ ......................number: - 3,759 2,087 87 264 14 49 138 411 Average net gain ........................dollars: - 136,153 111,493 1,686,342 2,715,974 258,166 241,453 84,874 114,833 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: - 296 164 4 - - 8 34 39 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 774 359 1 3 3 17 44 82 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: - 374 226 6 4 1 5 15 48 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: - 599 366 14 4 3 8 13 86 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 424 274 14 4 3 - 10 35 $50,000 or more ................................: - 1,292 698 48 249 4 11 22 121 : Farms with net losses ........................number: - 3,636 4,796 45 70 165 552 954 2,446 Average net loss ........................dollars: - 33,041 20,824 119,025 198,579 13,146 11,102 13,545 21,473 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: - 404 192 - - 6 26 48 82 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 1,264 1,257 9 13 45 174 296 508 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: - 678 1,084 6 9 46 108 265 567 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: - 667 1,386 10 16 54 204 226 748 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 295 531 9 12 10 34 92 341 $50,000 or more ................................: - 328 346 11 20 4 6 27 200 : Net cash farm income of producers ...............farms: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 $1,000: - 366,154 121,479 78,092 702,811 1,467 5,744 -1,270 -5,162 Average per farm ..........................dollars: - 49,514 17,649 591,606 2,104,225 8,193 9,557 -1,163 -1,807 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ ..............farms: - 3,747 2,084 87 264 15 49 137 415 Average net gain ........................dollars: - 132,560 106,582 959,169 2,714,817 242,950 242,282 85,293 113,891 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: - 297 166 4 - - 8 34 41 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 778 359 1 3 3 17 44 78 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: - 374 231 6 4 1 5 15 54 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: - 602 370 14 4 3 8 12 86 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 417 269 14 4 4 - 10 35 $50,000 or more ................................: - 1,279 689 48 249 4 11 22 121 : Producers reporting net losses ................farms: - 3,648 4,799 45 70 164 552 955 2,442 Average net loss ........................dollars: - 35,787 20,971 119,014 198,579 13,278 11,102 13,566 21,469 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ...............................: - 403 191 - - 5 26 48 78 $1,000 to $4,999 ...............................: - 1,272 1,264 9 13 45 176 296 515 $5,000 to $9,999 ...............................: - 676 1,084 6 9 46 106 265 562 $10,000 to $24,999 .............................: - 661 1,374 10 16 54 204 226 747 $25,000 to $49,999 .............................: - 297 534 9 12 10 34 93 340 $50,000 or more ................................: - 339 352 11 20 4 6 27 200 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...........................................farms: - 5 6 - - - - - 1 $1,000: - 200 (D) - - - - - (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ..........farms: - 2,829 1,978 61 177 22 66 182 816 $1,000: - 114,459 40,520 8,621 14,155 314 948 3,839 41,808 : Customwork and other agricultural services ....farms: - 763 329 4 36 5 20 23 81 $1,000: - 31,132 5,775 (D) 628 (D) (D) 117 997 : Gross cash rent or share payments .............farms: - 1,481 904 21 46 9 17 91 439 $1,000: - 48,887 19,080 (D) 5,774 64 (D) 2,094 5,856 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES - Con. : : Total income from farm-related sources - Con. : : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and maple : products .....................................farms: 426 6 3 8 24 146 - $1,000: 10,515 201 (D) (D) (D) 3,103 - Agri-tourism and recreational services ........farms: 200 6 5 12 20 44 - $1,000: 16,909 206 9 974 316 1,628 - Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives .................................farms: 2,432 522 138 8 21 874 - $1,000: 27,917 3,359 4,391 106 95 13,683 - Crop and livestock insurance payments .........farms: 966 282 56 5 3 254 - $1,000: 51,896 19,149 9,989 (D) (D) 9,255 - Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ................farms: 129 26 5 1 - 58 - $1,000: 982 313 (D) (D) - 345 - Other farm-related income sources .............farms: 870 96 35 8 24 216 - $1,000: 36,961 3,494 1,177 12 3,265 6,426 - : LAND USE : : Total cropland ..................................farms: 15,823 1,681 767 401 555 7,260 - acres: 5,623,516 1,754,451 943,408 9,117 17,207 1,965,431 - Harvested cropland ............................farms: 13,037 1,681 767 401 555 5,565 - acres: 4,370,363 1,467,684 835,599 7,358 13,333 1,388,134 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ..................................: 7,454 290 375 387 497 3,317 - 50 to 99 acres .................................: 1,154 160 34 8 28 501 - 100 to 199 acres ...............................: 1,197 229 60 2 15 521 - 200 to 499 acres ...............................: 1,342 301 59 3 6 572 - 500 to 999 acres ...............................: 826 297 58 - 9 298 - 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...........................: 519 180 69 - - 197 - 2,000 acres or more ............................: 545 224 112 1 - 159 - : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements ...............................farms: 1,737 114 54 16 35 483 - acres: 214,761 25,536 10,910 42 364 45,254 - On which all crops failed or were : abandoned ..................................farms: 983 98 50 23 22 487 - acres: 59,462 14,469 3,152 232 89 27,738 - Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .....................farms: 3,822 345 206 82 102 2,239 - acres: 660,805 91,759 57,558 1,150 2,738 425,437 - In summer fallow ............................farms: 1,696 406 121 30 45 706 - acres: 318,125 155,003 36,189 335 683 78,868 - : Total woodland ..................................farms: 3,406 156 45 95 110 1,294 - acres: 479,705 36,065 2,874 2,690 3,812 176,810 - Woodland pastured .............................farms: 1,561 77 17 15 21 357 - acres: 250,428 19,301 427 137 376 44,918 - Woodland not pastured .........................farms: 2,265 96 37 92 99 1,059 - acres: 229,277 16,764 2,447 2,553 3,436 131,892 - Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .................farms: 12,204 415 158 101 80 2,311 - acres: 5,012,618 268,132 47,989 2,152 2,898 700,714 - : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ......farms: 13,192 724 354 272 293 4,059 - acres: 432,124 70,455 24,585 2,987 2,389 159,806 - : Irrigated land ..................................farms: 14,191 1,084 767 399 493 4,417 - acres: 3,167,499 554,473 705,548 7,503 11,794 1,146,167 - Harvested cropland ............................farms: 10,389 1,079 766 399 493 4,315 - acres: 2,904,105 541,142 702,194 7,071 11,378 1,095,018 - Pastureland and other land ....................farms: 6,620 184 130 65 47 1,120 - acres: 263,394 13,331 3,354 432 416 51,149 - : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs ...................farms: 1,681 218 33 3 8 1,254 - acres: 423,658 58,447 19,079 (D) (D) 294,746 - : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ........farms: 2,599 954 276 28 28 936 - acres: 2,933,445 1,196,937 573,059 796 958 743,229 - : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales .....................farms: 227 37 36 5 24 93 - $1,000: 166,224 10,558 6,679 (D) (D) 35,851 - : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings ....farms: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - $1,000: 48,610,483 8,164,471 5,762,971 349,587 498,578 15,260,289 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES - Con. : : Total income from farm-related sources - Con. : : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and maple : products .....................................farms: - 146 132 4 5 3 17 29 49 $1,000: - 3,103 4,074 (D) (D) (D) 42 167 2,592 Agri-tourism and recreational services ........farms: - 44 46 2 - - 7 4 54 $1,000: - 1,628 496 (D) - - (D) (D) 13,002 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives .................................farms: - 874 598 35 128 7 9 29 63 $1,000: - 13,683 1,974 218 3,466 (D) (D) 152 450 Crop and livestock insurance payments .........farms: - 254 256 15 46 1 - 15 33 $1,000: - 9,255 6,042 2,152 3,361 (D) - (D) 546 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ................farms: - 58 28 - 5 - - 1 5 $1,000: - 345 175 - (D) - - (D) 10 Other farm-related income sources .............farms: - 216 206 13 17 3 8 22 222 $1,000: - 6,426 2,904 300 825 (D) (D) 35 18,354 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ..................................farms: - 7,260 3,049 79 251 61 207 341 1,171 acres: - 1,965,431 524,050 42,951 297,652 (D) 1,993 (D) 47,734 Harvested cropland ............................farms: - 5,565 2,539 74 241 42 86 177 909 acres: - 1,388,134 325,568 31,387 267,592 897 1,040 10,493 21,278 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ..................................: - 3,317 1,433 20 24 39 80 153 839 50 to 99 acres .................................: - 501 348 12 16 - 4 8 35 100 to 199 acres ...............................: - 521 287 19 33 2 2 7 20 200 to 499 acres ...............................: - 572 327 10 50 1 - 3 10 500 to 999 acres ...............................: - 298 98 7 52 - - 3 4 1,000 to 1,999 acres ...........................: - 197 36 4 30 - - 3 - 2,000 acres or more ............................: - 159 10 2 36 - - - 1 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements ...............................farms: - 483 597 8 38 12 44 99 237 acres: - 45,254 97,165 2,378 11,261 (D) (D) 1,962 16,751 On which all crops failed or were : abandoned ..................................farms: - 487 185 7 16 4 30 26 35 acres: - 27,738 10,144 464 1,787 5 (D) (D) 902 Idle or used for cover crops or soil : improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .....................farms: - 2,239 460 17 30 14 77 113 137 acres: - 425,437 58,265 3,017 11,082 78 305 1,917 7,499 In summer fallow ............................farms: - 706 263 17 27 - 26 18 37 acres: - 78,868 32,908 5,705 5,930 - 233 967 1,304 : Total woodland ..................................farms: - 1,294 904 14 19 42 132 155 440 acres: - 176,810 158,683 6,551 2,048 (D) 3,387 (D) 81,103 Woodland pastured .............................farms: - 357 616 10 10 14 67 94 263 acres: - 44,918 135,562 5,386 667 144 690 1,837 40,983 Woodland not pastured .........................farms: - 1,059 405 6 12 37 91 75 256 acres: - 131,892 23,121 1,165 1,381 (D) 2,697 (D) 40,120 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .................farms: - 2,311 5,583 100 137 99 366 838 2,016 acres: - 700,714 2,710,732 137,531 25,623 924 4,154 234,924 876,845 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ......farms: - 4,059 4,004 69 242 130 437 738 1,870 acres: - 159,806 101,926 5,524 33,652 868 1,747 5,047 23,138 : Irrigated land ..................................farms: - 4,417 4,277 83 262 52 233 604 1,520 acres: - 1,146,167 393,753 31,385 257,216 663 1,683 13,567 43,747 Harvested cropland ............................farms: - 4,315 2,062 62 236 31 72 150 724 acres: - 1,095,018 244,086 27,998 251,147 562 641 9,038 13,830 Pastureland and other land ....................farms: - 1,120 3,157 46 70 30 195 527 1,049 acres: - 51,149 149,667 3,387 6,069 101 1,042 4,529 29,917 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs ...................farms: - 1,254 132 7 7 1 2 - 16 acres: - 294,746 45,146 1,382 1,708 (D) (D) - 2,271 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ........farms: - 936 257 12 72 2 - 7 27 acres: - 743,229 254,431 21,032 119,802 (D) - (D) 19,291 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales .....................farms: - 93 12 1 18 - - 1 - $1,000: - 35,851 (D) (D) 107,787 - - (D) - : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings ....farms: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 $1,000: - 15,260,289 10,634,578 556,623 3,129,591 123,943 349,804 792,678 2,987,368 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS - Con. : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings - Con. : : Average per farm ..........................dollars: 2,124,863 4,856,913 7,513,652 871,789 898,339 2,063,596 - Average per acre ..........................dollars: 4,209 3,835 5,656 20,629 18,953 5,082 - : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ....................................: 1,300 35 53 39 62 342 - $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................: 1,091 25 28 23 33 398 - $100,000 to $199,999 .............................: 1,951 70 27 53 56 696 - $200,000 to $499,999 .............................: 5,883 192 124 92 157 1,758 - $500,000 to $999,999 .............................: 5,555 213 146 109 132 1,721 - : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 .........................: 2,930 297 90 57 80 1,036 - $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 .........................: 2,186 402 74 21 17 831 - $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 .........................: 969 245 68 5 8 299 - $10,000,000 or more ..............................: 1,012 202 157 2 10 314 - : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ......................................farms: 22,877 1,681 767 401 555 7,395 - $1,000: 4,930,153 904,233 704,458 21,260 58,582 1,587,964 - : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 .....................................: 1,609 30 50 42 44 527 - $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: 1,735 46 38 64 53 633 - $10,000 to $19,999 ...............................: 2,733 66 77 64 59 909 - $20,000 to $49,999 ...............................: 5,105 151 143 90 146 1,809 - $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................: 4,134 214 69 74 122 1,294 - $100,000 to $199,999 .............................: 3,057 216 43 51 56 790 - $200,000 to $499,999 .............................: 2,429 400 78 11 60 714 - $500,000 or more .................................: 2,075 558 269 5 15 719 - : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups .......................farms: 18,416 1,499 668 299 419 5,374 - number: 54,948 7,524 6,340 453 901 16,857 - : Tractors, all ...................................farms: 16,968 1,455 622 289 390 5,437 - number: 42,226 5,846 3,123 485 717 14,758 - Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .................farms: 7,400 420 271 198 275 2,091 - number: 9,283 579 376 247 356 2,795 - 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms: 9,749 813 304 140 186 3,307 - number: 14,421 1,276 694 210 267 4,989 - 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..................farms: 6,684 1,268 362 19 52 2,559 - number: 18,522 3,991 2,053 28 94 6,974 - : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .........farms: 2,292 898 284 5 1 832 - number: 3,237 1,326 455 (D) (D) 1,118 - Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ....farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...............farms: 2,307 226 43 10 4 1,064 - number: 2,680 287 52 11 4 1,236 - Hay balers ......................................farms: 6,213 575 122 25 27 2,920 - number: 7,569 748 151 27 28 3,621 - : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ...........................................farms: 8,673 1,568 564 164 234 2,925 - acres treated: 3,496,612 1,295,419 781,803 2,561 11,313 993,726 - Manure used .....................................farms: 3,432 235 128 46 51 960 - acres treated: 331,595 51,081 29,149 199 863 142,910 - Organic fertilizer used .........................farms: 497 42 45 28 47 169 - acres treated: 55,232 11,646 3,726 155 349 30,986 - : Acres treated to control- : Insects .......................................farms: 2,975 641 491 144 168 1,010 - acres: 1,304,919 314,975 451,684 1,837 6,003 456,814 - Weeds, grass, or brush ........................farms: 8,233 1,561 553 136 241 2,769 - acres: 3,216,414 1,266,690 753,848 2,130 9,207 852,124 - Nematodes .....................................farms: 714 96 303 15 18 232 - acres: 311,847 47,081 202,225 404 120 54,600 - Diseases in crops and orchards ................farms: 1,321 345 330 105 65 404 - acres: 759,333 281,318 290,607 1,333 2,207 164,333 - Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ................farms: 877 126 318 47 16 298 - acres on which used: 305,558 31,925 190,972 3,854 41 71,251 - : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ............................farms: 405 94 13 1 7 149 - acres: 74,786 46,013 1,239 (D) (D) 17,065 - Land artificially drained by ditches ............farms: 2,229 221 82 46 23 646 - acres: 217,276 85,677 17,261 488 706 56,860 - Land under conservation easement ................farms: 427 32 6 1 2 256 - acres: 166,621 13,324 (D) (D) (D) 38,798 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS - Con. : : Estimated market value of land and : buildings - Con. : : Average per farm ..........................dollars: - 2,063,596 1,545,050 4,216,844 9,370,034 692,420 582,037 725,896 1,045,631 Average per acre ..........................dollars: - 5,082 3,042 2,891 8,718 19,436 31,008 3,042 2,904 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ....................................: - 342 469 1 4 9 18 83 185 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................: - 398 315 4 17 11 13 75 149 $100,000 to $199,999 .............................: - 696 565 7 9 9 40 129 290 $200,000 to $499,999 .............................: - 1,758 1,970 19 36 76 231 370 858 $500,000 to $999,999 .............................: - 1,721 1,709 30 32 50 229 329 855 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 .........................: - 1,036 832 15 37 20 61 71 334 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 .........................: - 831 595 27 67 3 8 22 119 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 .........................: - 299 233 17 49 - - 4 41 $10,000,000 or more ..............................: - 314 195 12 83 1 1 9 26 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ......................................farms: - 7,395 6,883 132 334 179 601 1,092 2,857 $1,000: - 1,587,964 742,330 59,069 517,541 10,708 40,648 61,449 221,909 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 .....................................: - 527 515 3 5 7 62 132 192 $5,000 to $9,999 .................................: - 633 478 3 - 13 52 141 214 $10,000 to $19,999 ...............................: - 909 826 9 19 53 86 216 349 $20,000 to $49,999 ...............................: - 1,809 1,577 16 13 32 188 253 687 $50,000 to $99,999 ...............................: - 1,294 1,376 21 26 49 109 157 623 $100,000 to $199,999 .............................: - 790 1,121 23 24 9 70 125 529 $200,000 to $499,999 .............................: - 714 742 27 41 14 31 61 250 $500,000 or more .................................: - 719 248 30 206 2 3 7 13 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups .......................farms: - 5,374 5,846 120 319 142 519 900 2,311 number: - 16,857 12,941 452 2,782 258 795 1,484 4,161 : Tractors, all ...................................farms: - 5,437 5,264 111 301 122 374 641 1,962 number: - 14,758 10,155 379 2,304 168 476 944 2,871 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .................farms: - 2,091 2,232 44 102 77 269 407 1,014 number: - 2,795 2,688 55 155 90 293 456 1,193 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms: - 3,307 3,198 71 204 54 134 303 1,035 number: - 4,989 4,372 123 602 64 154 388 1,282 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..................farms: - 2,559 1,667 62 264 13 27 62 329 number: - 6,974 3,095 201 1,547 14 29 100 396 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .........farms: - 832 190 7 51 1 5 7 11 number: - 1,118 216 11 74 (D) (D) 11 11 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ....farms: - - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...............farms: - 1,064 676 28 107 3 6 31 109 number: - 1,236 743 39 152 3 6 31 116 Hay balers ......................................farms: - 2,920 1,813 61 132 11 26 95 406 number: - 3,621 2,141 70 170 11 29 112 461 : FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ...........................................farms: - 2,925 1,998 48 208 27 91 196 650 acres treated: - 993,726 188,452 20,498 181,065 552 1,070 7,746 12,407 Manure used .....................................farms: - 960 1,113 27 126 33 73 168 472 acres treated: - 142,910 40,807 2,980 54,596 181 591 1,669 6,569 Organic fertilizer used .........................farms: - 169 89 1 10 - 8 8 50 acres treated: - 30,986 3,523 (D) 4,172 - (D) 57 550 : Acres treated to control- : Insects .......................................farms: - 1,010 280 11 47 7 20 32 124 acres: - 456,814 22,813 2,761 44,811 (D) (D) 322 2,452 Weeds, grass, or brush ........................farms: - 2,769 1,753 38 203 16 80 202 681 acres: - 852,124 121,873 15,442 174,237 489 1,119 6,391 12,864 Nematodes .....................................farms: - 232 26 2 12 1 - 2 7 acres: - 54,600 1,660 (D) 5,634 (D) - (D) 73 Diseases in crops and orchards ................farms: - 404 32 4 8 1 5 6 16 acres: - 164,333 2,938 (D) (D) (D) 41 58 71 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate ................farms: - 298 35 2 4 4 3 2 22 acres on which used: - 71,251 2,096 (D) (D) 36 6 (D) 98 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile ............................farms: - 149 86 1 13 3 2 14 22 acres: - 17,065 7,385 (D) 1,725 9 (D) 70 1,213 Land artificially drained by ditches ............farms: - 646 778 18 32 7 57 98 221 acres: - 56,860 42,651 3,035 5,826 58 370 955 3,389 Land under conservation easement ................farms: - 256 78 1 - - 1 5 45 acres: - 38,798 73,856 (D) - - (D) (D) (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE PRACTICES - Con. : : Cropland on which no-till practices were : used ...........................................farms: 1,798 429 164 41 78 686 - acres: 641,103 423,819 74,536 168 901 107,876 - Cropland on which conservation or reduced : tillage, excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ................................farms: 2,102 627 147 31 39 725 - acres: 983,544 533,356 162,260 212 1,161 196,951 - Cropland on which intensive or conventional : tillage practices were used (see text) .........farms: 4,226 1,019 462 32 87 1,700 - acres: 1,842,044 528,324 580,898 1,343 4,266 543,990 - Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ................................farms: 1,326 175 130 70 82 507 - acres: 127,777 28,781 17,345 713 1,683 50,482 - Use of precision agriculture practices : (see text) .....................................farms: 2,717 771 239 22 35 1,066 - : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems : (see text) .....................................farms: 1,682 63 56 58 70 392 - Solar panels ..................................farms: 1,427 44 44 46 56 320 - Wind turbines .................................farms: 99 12 14 1 3 27 - Methane digesters .............................farms: 10 - 1 - - - - Geothermal/geoexchange systems ................farms: 191 8 7 11 12 52 - Small hydro systems ...........................farms: 82 1 3 4 6 18 - : Wind rights leased to others ....................farms: 83 16 3 - - 32 - : TENURE : : Full owners .....................................farms: 17,125 671 373 366 472 5,730 - Part owners .....................................farms: 4,463 768 321 25 42 1,332 - Tenants .........................................farms: 1,289 242 73 10 41 333 - : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ......................................farms: 21,665 1,461 697 397 515 7,079 - acres: 8,813,519 1,192,623 586,354 18,225 19,766 2,667,469 - Owned land in farms ...........................farms: 21,588 1,439 694 391 514 7,062 - acres: 7,737,908 1,054,406 547,349 14,584 17,079 2,133,051 - : Land rented or leased from others ...............farms: 5,829 1,015 398 35 83 1,704 - acres: 3,852,080 1,088,729 479,943 2,368 9,437 881,462 - Rented or leased land in farms ................farms: 5,752 1,010 394 35 83 1,665 - acres: 3,810,055 1,074,697 471,507 2,362 9,227 869,710 - : Land rented or leased to others .................farms: 3,262 359 134 72 44 1,358 - acres: 1,117,636 152,249 47,441 3,647 2,897 546,170 - : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER : OF PRODUCERS : : Total producers ......................................: 44,714 3,341 1,681 833 1,230 14,335 - Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .......................................: 6,958 616 200 82 153 2,564 - 2 producers ......................................: 12,840 737 406 267 282 3,780 - 3 producers ......................................: 1,621 204 74 26 45 530 - 4 producers ......................................: 910 83 59 13 45 316 - 5 or more producers ..............................: 548 41 28 13 30 205 - : Total male producers ...............................: 27,035 2,387 1,162 469 725 8,950 - Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer .....................................: 17,639 1,152 505 322 357 5,554 - 2 producers ....................................: 2,533 334 124 17 83 894 - 3 producers ....................................: 838 110 56 28 25 317 - 4 producers ....................................: 193 16 31 1 11 58 - 5 or more producers ............................: 173 25 16 5 15 75 - : Total female producers .............................: 17,679 954 519 364 505 5,385 - Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer .....................................: 14,310 770 428 289 368 4,241 - 2 producers ....................................: 1,105 62 33 22 49 340 - 3 producers ....................................: 163 4 3 9 1 61 - 4 producers ....................................: 83 12 4 1 3 18 - 5 or more producers ............................: 58 - - - 2 36 - : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male ..............................................: 26,384 2,281 1,097 458 683 8,706 - Female .............................................: 16,949 917 485 340 469 5,092 - : Hired managers .......................................: 3,382 602 441 60 263 1,054 - : Primary occupation: : Farming ............................................: 17,793 2,132 1,013 295 532 5,539 - Other ..............................................: 25,540 1,066 569 503 620 8,259 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE PRACTICES - Con. : : Cropland on which no-till practices were : used ...........................................farms: - 686 231 7 38 4 41 20 59 acres: - 107,876 15,143 231 16,426 (D) (D) 623 952 Cropland on which conservation or reduced : tillage, excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ................................farms: - 725 305 11 77 3 39 26 72 acres: - 196,951 30,239 7,117 48,299 6 238 1,932 1,773 Cropland on which intensive or conventional : tillage practices were used (see text) .........farms: - 1,700 597 31 163 5 12 25 93 acres: - 543,990 57,169 13,191 107,790 (D) (D) 1,986 2,791 Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ................................farms: - 507 192 3 34 4 36 21 72 acres: - 50,482 11,995 (D) 13,593 8 (D) 498 1,165 Use of precision agriculture practices : (see text) .....................................farms: - 1,066 351 11 93 - 17 40 72 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems : (see text) .....................................farms: - 392 537 9 21 31 75 121 249 Solar panels ..................................farms: - 320 481 8 17 28 73 102 208 Wind turbines .................................farms: - 27 28 1 1 - - 5 7 Methane digesters .............................farms: - - 3 - 3 3 - - - Geothermal/geoexchange systems ................farms: - 52 46 - - - 3 18 34 Small hydro systems ...........................farms: - 18 29 1 - - 1 2 17 : Wind rights leased to others ....................farms: - 32 18 1 1 - - 2 10 : TENURE : : Full owners .....................................farms: - 5,730 5,121 73 190 158 557 959 2,455 Part owners .....................................farms: - 1,332 1,371 53 124 12 33 93 289 Tenants .........................................farms: - 333 391 6 20 9 11 40 113 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ......................................farms: - 7,079 6,512 126 317 170 590 1,052 2,749 acres: - 2,667,469 2,558,415 157,038 313,269 3,333 10,774 205,849 1,080,404 Owned land in farms ...........................farms: - 7,062 6,492 126 314 170 590 1,052 2,744 acres: - 2,133,051 2,402,201 151,792 284,099 2,527 9,678 194,899 926,243 : Land rented or leased from others ...............farms: - 1,704 1,778 59 147 21 44 133 412 acres: - 881,462 1,096,104 40,765 77,389 3,850 1,603 66,141 104,289 Rented or leased land in farms ................farms: - 1,665 1,762 59 144 21 44 133 402 acres: - 869,710 1,093,190 40,765 74,876 3,850 1,603 65,691 102,577 : Land rented or leased to others .................farms: - 1,358 734 17 45 8 21 90 380 acres: - 546,170 159,128 5,246 31,683 806 1,096 11,400 155,873 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER : OF PRODUCERS : : Total producers ......................................: - 14,335 12,992 248 799 369 1,188 2,035 5,663 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .......................................: - 2,564 2,038 48 83 28 116 296 734 2 producers ......................................: - 3,780 4,102 62 141 135 431 697 1,800 3 producers ......................................: - 530 404 15 55 5 37 58 168 4 producers ......................................: - 316 229 4 38 5 5 34 79 5 or more producers ..............................: - 205 110 3 17 6 12 7 76 : Total male producers ...............................: - 8,950 7,568 179 567 186 638 1,035 3,169 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer .....................................: - 5,554 5,669 96 188 152 519 845 2,280 2 producers ....................................: - 894 635 19 80 17 33 75 222 3 producers ....................................: - 317 135 11 38 - 10 12 96 4 producers ....................................: - 58 41 3 13 - 2 1 16 5 or more producers ............................: - 75 10 - 8 - 3 - 16 : Total female producers .............................: - 5,385 5,424 69 232 183 550 1,000 2,494 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer .....................................: - 4,241 4,503 59 173 149 483 858 1,989 2 producers ....................................: - 340 340 5 22 5 16 65 146 3 producers ....................................: - 61 41 - 5 - 9 4 26 4 producers ....................................: - 18 22 - - 6 2 - 15 5 or more producers ............................: - 36 6 - - - - - 14 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male ..............................................: - 8,706 7,490 178 538 186 628 1,035 3,104 Female .............................................: - 5,092 5,320 67 212 171 529 993 2,354 : Hired managers .......................................: - 1,054 409 38 282 7 11 20 195 : Primary occupation: : Farming ............................................: - 5,539 4,724 145 617 80 301 676 1,739 Other ..............................................: - 8,259 8,086 100 133 277 856 1,352 3,719 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ - Con. : : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...................................: 33,141 2,062 1,246 655 692 9,441 - Not on farm operated ...............................: 10,192 1,136 336 143 460 4,357 - : Days of work off farm: : None ...............................................: 16,151 1,625 814 309 484 5,537 - Any ................................................: 27,182 1,573 768 489 668 8,261 - 1 to 49 days .....................................: 4,566 349 150 113 108 1,638 - 50 to 99 days ....................................: 2,032 148 76 45 76 686 - 100 to 199 days ..................................: 3,482 209 145 59 82 1,003 - 200 days or more .................................: 17,102 867 397 272 402 4,934 - : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ....................................: 2,561 197 100 72 124 739 - 3 or 4 years .......................................: 4,392 256 156 69 146 1,398 - 5 to 9 years .......................................: 9,426 600 332 196 277 2,653 - 10 years or more ...................................: 26,954 2,145 994 461 605 9,008 - : Average years on present farm ......................: 19.0 21.9 20.1 16.1 15.2 20.4 - : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ....................................: 7,099 472 245 161 320 2,033 - 6 to 10 years ......................................: 7,699 429 232 153 196 2,309 - 11 years or more ...................................: 28,535 2,297 1,105 484 636 9,456 - : Average years on any farm ..........................: 21.7 25.3 23.0 18.3 17.0 23.3 - : Age group: : Under 25 years .....................................: 832 63 33 18 27 206 - 25 to 34 years .....................................: 3,027 305 177 35 88 856 - 35 to 44 years .....................................: 6,911 602 340 92 215 1,764 - 45 to 54 years .....................................: 7,320 455 276 141 215 1,888 - 55 to 64 years .....................................: 10,123 742 312 183 258 3,288 - 65 to 74 years .....................................: 10,095 695 328 211 275 3,689 - 75 years and over ..................................: 5,025 336 116 118 74 2,107 - : Average age ........................................: 56.6 55.2 53.2 58.9 54.2 59.2 - : Young producers (see text) ...........................: 3,859 368 210 53 115 1,062 - : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .....: 1,341 67 32 14 31 333 - : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ...................: 290 10 6 4 16 65 - Asian ..............................................: 144 37 19 12 3 28 - Black or African American ..........................: 19 1 - - 1 1 - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ..........: 42 1 3 2 - 8 - White ..............................................: 42,509 3,138 1,544 763 1,129 13,588 - More than one race reported ........................: 329 11 10 17 3 108 - : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) .........: 39,671 3,048 1,520 701 1,058 12,569 - Active duty now or in the past (see text) ..........: 3,662 150 62 97 94 1,229 - : Number of persons living in producers' : households ..........................................: 86,167 7,148 3,715 1,527 2,578 27,396 - : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ...............................: 37,172 2,645 1,383 682 978 11,548 - Land use and/or crop decisions .....................: 32,598 2,415 1,314 631 859 10,380 - Livestock decisions ................................: 26,379 1,087 506 304 267 5,794 - Marketing decisions (see text) .....................: 25,823 2,178 1,074 457 769 7,331 - Record keeping and/or financial management .........: 30,863 2,429 1,194 538 823 9,529 - Estate planning or succession planning .............: 23,727 1,817 947 402 501 7,567 - : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one : producer's household and/or extended family ....farms: 21,570 1,522 704 381 488 6,888 - acres: 9,774,644 1,900,640 845,772 14,730 18,842 2,468,171 - Limited Liability Company .......................farms: 3,390 367 188 76 136 1,086 - acres: 2,655,263 507,465 336,090 3,769 4,857 706,259 - : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ...........................farms: 18,427 1,070 458 345 384 5,864 - acres: 4,611,219 890,996 182,810 12,197 9,448 1,327,113 - Partnership .....................................farms: 1,752 298 124 17 27 574 - acres: 2,798,624 695,676 492,481 1,267 1,102 611,987 - Registered under State law ....................farms: 1,562 282 121 17 26 503 - acres: 2,678,784 675,377 492,463 1,267 1,101 583,063 - : Corporation .....................................farms: 2,145 293 175 23 110 730 - acres: 3,033,242 528,033 342,081 1,604 14,946 787,121 - Family held ...................................farms: 1,883 273 159 20 76 635 - acres: 2,758,073 493,493 303,604 1,583 8,919 704,892 - More than 10 stockholders ...................farms: 35 2 5 - - 20 - 10 or less stockholders .....................farms: 1,848 271 154 20 76 615 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ - Con. : : Place of residence: : On farm operated ...................................: - 9,441 10,664 173 524 340 1,109 1,884 4,351 Not on farm operated ...............................: - 4,357 2,146 72 226 17 48 144 1,107 : Days of work off farm: : None ...............................................: - 5,537 4,178 113 501 65 277 607 1,641 Any ................................................: - 8,261 8,632 132 249 292 880 1,421 3,817 1 to 49 days .....................................: - 1,638 1,266 18 45 30 94 194 561 50 to 99 days ....................................: - 686 575 7 12 22 63 75 247 100 to 199 days ..................................: - 1,003 1,105 26 18 33 125 162 515 200 days or more .................................: - 4,934 5,686 81 174 207 598 990 2,494 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ....................................: - 739 674 5 16 23 65 144 402 3 or 4 years .......................................: - 1,398 1,293 16 58 48 186 266 500 5 to 9 years .......................................: - 2,653 2,863 33 67 137 432 626 1,210 10 years or more ...................................: - 9,008 7,980 191 609 149 474 992 3,346 : Average years on present farm ......................: - 20.4 19.0 26.4 23.7 10.4 12.1 14.5 17.5 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ....................................: - 2,033 2,091 17 71 87 294 427 881 6 to 10 years ......................................: - 2,309 2,240 23 66 141 375 504 1,031 11 years or more ...................................: - 9,456 8,479 205 613 129 488 1,097 3,546 : Average years on any farm ..........................: - 23.3 21.7 31.1 26.5 11.9 13.5 17.0 20.2 : Age group: : Under 25 years .....................................: - 206 290 - 5 5 25 43 117 25 to 34 years .....................................: - 856 855 17 80 26 101 167 320 35 to 44 years .....................................: - 1,764 1,926 34 163 111 264 488 912 45 to 54 years .....................................: - 1,888 2,390 40 138 118 310 410 939 55 to 64 years .....................................: - 3,288 3,172 57 208 60 246 386 1,211 65 to 74 years .....................................: - 3,689 2,770 47 119 33 161 392 1,375 75 years and over ..................................: - 2,107 1,407 50 37 4 50 142 584 : Average age ........................................: - 59.2 56.2 59.4 52.6 48.2 51.3 53.0 56.7 : Young producers (see text) ...........................: - 1,062 1,145 17 85 31 126 210 437 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin .....: - 333 517 11 56 10 54 77 139 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ...................: - 65 101 - - 2 8 16 62 Asian ..............................................: - 28 26 1 1 - - 6 11 Black or African American ..........................: - 1 10 - - - - 3 3 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ..........: - 8 19 - - 2 - 3 4 White ..............................................: - 13,588 12,563 244 749 351 1,129 1,973 5,338 More than one race reported ........................: - 108 91 - - 2 20 27 40 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) .........: - 12,569 11,730 226 732 340 1,003 1,794 4,950 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ..........: - 1,229 1,080 19 18 17 154 234 508 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ..........................................: - 27,396 24,414 582 1,982 762 2,291 3,833 9,939 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ...............................: - 11,548 11,136 198 663 350 1,052 1,806 4,731 Land use and/or crop decisions .....................: - 10,380 9,655 192 511 258 908 1,509 3,966 Livestock decisions ................................: - 5,794 10,552 196 586 310 983 1,757 4,037 Marketing decisions (see text) .....................: - 7,331 8,172 181 508 251 682 1,295 2,925 Record keeping and/or financial management .........: - 9,529 9,316 176 597 257 844 1,469 3,691 Estate planning or succession planning .............: - 7,567 7,124 155 491 169 572 1,048 2,934 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one : producer's household and/or extended family ....farms: - 6,888 6,644 121 297 172 589 1,066 2,698 acres: - 2,468,171 3,034,641 110,232 316,204 6,068 9,967 202,406 846,971 Limited Liability Company .......................farms: - 1,086 775 24 131 21 63 113 410 acres: - 706,259 757,561 31,984 179,976 183 908 11,968 114,243 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ...........................farms: - 5,864 5,964 85 160 164 542 998 2,393 acres: - 1,327,113 1,761,144 48,147 90,809 5,562 7,655 61,431 213,907 Partnership .....................................farms: - 574 381 15 106 5 16 40 149 acres: - 611,987 692,681 (D) 168,756 (D) 277 (D) 92,848 Registered under State law ....................farms: - 503 330 13 100 5 14 28 123 acres: - 583,063 632,708 (D) 165,711 (D) 267 (D) 87,342 : Corporation .....................................farms: - 730 418 28 68 8 37 36 219 acres: - 787,121 940,674 106,801 99,410 586 2,781 134,003 75,202 Family held ...................................farms: - 635 379 21 66 7 29 33 185 acres: - 704,892 879,173 97,789 (D) (D) 2,604 (D) (D) More than 10 stockholders ...................farms: - 20 4 2 - - - - 2 10 or less stockholders .....................farms: - 615 375 19 66 7 29 33 183 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES - Con. : : Corporation - Con. : : Other than family held ........................farms: 262 20 16 3 34 95 - acres: 275,169 34,540 38,477 21 6,027 82,229 - More than 10 stockholders ...................farms: 32 - 1 - 4 22 - 10 or less stockholders .....................farms: 230 20 15 3 30 73 - : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : association, American Indian Reservation, etc. .farms: 553 20 10 16 34 227 - acres: 1,104,878 14,398 1,484 1,878 810 276,540 - : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ................................farms: 5,697 907 441 91 221 1,764 - workers: 42,990 4,173 10,242 1,270 2,843 9,695 - Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ............................farms: 3,478 598 333 36 160 1,041 - workers: 21,741 2,058 3,615 239 1,258 4,759 - Less than 150 days ..........................farms: 3,988 642 363 82 188 1,249 - workers: 21,249 2,115 6,627 1,031 1,585 4,936 - Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ....farms: 714 124 162 17 31 241 - Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .................................farms: 32 3 1 7 - 10 - Unpaid workers ..................................farms: 8,421 404 218 199 187 2,471 - workers: 21,358 881 485 515 415 5,834 - : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .........................................: 5,785 52 245 219 282 776 - 10 to 49 acres .......................................: 6,977 191 98 128 166 2,427 - 50 to 69 acres .......................................: 881 50 6 8 16 380 - 70 to 99 acres .......................................: 1,133 82 27 21 33 543 - 100 to 139 acres .....................................: 960 86 26 9 11 408 - 140 to 179 acres .....................................: 927 92 36 3 15 455 - 180 to 219 acres .....................................: 517 41 20 4 2 238 - 220 to 259 acres .....................................: 432 60 11 3 8 189 - 260 to 499 acres .....................................: 1,566 214 44 3 9 734 - 500 to 999 acres .....................................: 1,384 277 57 1 10 570 - 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: 1,048 232 58 1 3 376 - 2,000 acres or more ..................................: 1,267 304 139 1 - 299 - : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .....................: 1,681 1,681 - - - - - Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...................: 767 - 767 - - - - Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ....................: 401 - - 401 - - - Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) ...................................: 555 - - - 555 - - Other crop farming (1119) ............................: 7,395 - - - - 7,395 - Tobacco farming (11191) ............................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .............................: - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ................: 7,395 - - - - 7,395 - Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ............: 6,883 - - - - - - Cattle feedlots (112112) .............................: 132 - - - - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .............: 334 - - - - - - Hog and pig farming (1122) ...........................: 179 - - - - - - Poultry and egg production (1123) ....................: 601 - - - - - - Sheep and goat farming (1124) ........................: 1,092 - - - - - - Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ..............................: 2,857 - - - - - - : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 ........: 17,963 604 349 369 402 5,782 - Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ......: 1,235 280 50 7 33 373 - Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ......: 1,207 361 98 4 35 418 - Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to : $4,999,999 ......................................: 875 261 123 - 16 284 - Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more ........: 290 16 84 1 2 31 - Non-family farms ...................................: 1,307 159 63 20 67 507 - : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access ....................................: 19,417 1,496 697 359 501 5,952 - Dial-up ..........................................: 537 37 12 13 12 166 - Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ...: 10,022 788 413 186 263 3,149 - Cellular data plan (see text) ....................: 12,438 1,036 481 219 299 3,659 - Satellite ........................................: 5,457 357 183 117 147 1,536 - Don't know .......................................: 905 87 18 6 24 322 - Other ............................................: 304 26 5 10 3 87 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES - Con. : : Corporation - Con. : : Other than family held ........................farms: - 95 39 7 2 1 8 3 34 acres: - 82,229 61,501 9,012 (D) (D) 177 (D) (D) More than 10 stockholders ...................farms: - 22 3 - - 1 1 - - 10 or less stockholders .....................farms: - 73 36 7 2 - 7 3 34 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing : association, American Indian Reservation, etc. .farms: - 227 120 4 - 2 6 18 96 acres: - 276,540 100,892 (D) - (D) 568 (D) 646,863 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor ................................farms: - 1,764 1,243 57 269 26 74 143 461 workers: - 9,695 3,684 575 7,558 140 440 590 1,780 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ............................farms: - 1,041 638 33 255 15 27 68 274 workers: - 4,759 1,630 393 6,364 111 153 260 901 Less than 150 days ..........................farms: - 1,249 852 41 119 15 54 96 287 workers: - 4,936 2,054 182 1,194 29 287 330 879 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ....farms: - 241 38 4 68 - - 17 12 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .................................farms: - 10 5 - - - - 2 4 Unpaid workers ..................................farms: - 2,471 2,826 48 56 86 271 487 1,168 workers: - 5,834 7,642 118 131 247 778 1,355 2,957 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres .........................................: - 776 2,137 12 36 103 328 560 1,035 10 to 49 acres .......................................: - 2,427 2,152 20 40 65 239 402 1,049 50 to 69 acres .......................................: - 380 268 6 7 2 5 33 100 70 to 99 acres .......................................: - 543 290 10 9 3 13 29 73 100 to 139 acres .....................................: - 408 244 10 28 - 6 15 117 140 to 179 acres .....................................: - 455 195 10 15 2 5 8 91 180 to 219 acres .....................................: - 238 122 4 11 1 3 3 68 220 to 259 acres .....................................: - 189 106 2 6 - - 8 39 260 to 499 acres .....................................: - 734 384 8 44 2 - 6 118 500 to 999 acres .....................................: - 570 319 15 53 - 1 7 74 1,000 to 1,999 acres .................................: - 376 285 13 36 - 1 5 38 2,000 acres or more ..................................: - 299 381 22 49 1 - 16 55 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) .....................: - - - - - - - - - Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ...................: - - - - - - - - - Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ....................: - - - - - - - - - Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) ...................................: - - - - - - - - - Other crop farming (1119) ............................: - 7,395 - - - - - - - Tobacco farming (11191) ............................: - - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .............................: - - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ................: - 7,395 - - - - - - - Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ............: - - 6,883 - - - - - - Cattle feedlots (112112) .............................: - - - 132 - - - - - Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .............: - - - - 334 - - - - Hog and pig farming (1122) ...........................: - - - - - 179 - - - Poultry and egg production (1123) ....................: - - - - - - 601 - - Sheep and goat farming (1124) ........................: - - - - - - - 1,092 - Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125,1129) ..............................: - - - - - - - - 2,857 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 ........: - 5,782 5,942 72 50 167 584 1,040 2,602 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ......: - 373 398 22 19 1 4 5 43 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ......: - 418 215 6 31 2 - 7 30 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to : $4,999,999 ......................................: - 284 75 6 73 1 1 13 22 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more ........: - 31 14 15 124 1 - 1 1 Non-family farms ...................................: - 507 239 11 37 7 12 26 159 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access ....................................: - 5,952 5,803 115 329 161 544 950 2,510 Dial-up ..........................................: - 166 181 3 20 - 6 19 68 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ...: - 3,149 2,919 58 193 92 263 484 1,214 Cellular data plan (see text) ....................: - 3,659 3,728 68 244 94 363 605 1,642 Satellite ........................................: - 1,536 1,620 36 96 48 207 313 797 Don't know .......................................: - 322 292 5 4 1 11 33 102 Other ............................................: - 87 73 - 1 8 13 23 55 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net : income of operation: : 1 household ........................................: 18,831 1,238 536 352 466 5,923 - 2 households .......................................: 2,888 318 158 42 58 1,006 - 3 households .......................................: 661 88 27 5 27 259 - 4 households .......................................: 291 28 24 1 - 109 - 5 or more households ...............................: 206 9 22 1 4 98 - : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory .....................farms: 8,956 325 79 25 25 1,267 - number: 2,517,987 47,185 9,433 913 1,691 102,089 - Farms with- : 1 to 9 ...........................................: 3,651 38 28 19 13 391 - 10 to 49 .........................................: 2,769 110 28 4 5 496 - 50 to 99 .........................................: 770 43 3 1 - 180 - 100 to 199 .......................................: 606 69 8 - 4 103 - 200 to 499 .......................................: 607 48 6 - 3 64 - 500 or more ......................................: 553 17 6 1 - 33 - : Cows and heifers that calved ..................farms: 7,712 294 66 24 19 1,149 - number: 1,113,728 26,678 5,060 (D) (D) 57,232 - : Beef cows ...................................farms: 7,379 293 63 19 17 1,137 - number: 449,249 26,662 5,050 (D) 1,092 (D) - Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 3,402 38 19 15 5 413 - 10 to 49 .....................................: 2,343 120 25 3 5 490 - 50 to 99 .....................................: 581 51 5 1 1 112 - 100 to 199 ...................................: 517 60 4 - 6 74 - 200 to 499 ...................................: 375 19 8 - - 35 - 500 or more ..................................: 161 5 2 - - 13 - : Milk cows ...................................farms: 549 5 4 6 2 21 - number: 664,479 16 10 (D) (D) (D) - Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................: 259 5 4 6 2 19 - 10 to 49 .....................................: 21 - - - - 1 - 50 to 99 .....................................: 17 - - - - - - 100 to 199 ...................................: 27 - - - - - - 200 to 499 ...................................: 58 - - - - - - 500 or more ..................................: 167 - - - - 1 - : Other cattle ..................................farms: 6,745 298 60 12 18 978 - number: 1,404,259 20,507 4,373 (D) (D) 44,857 - : Cattle and calves sold ..........................farms: 7,630 297 76 15 19 1,011 - number: 1,835,062 26,449 5,449 117 795 63,784 - $1,000: 2,175,548 27,381 6,607 121 1,063 69,574 - Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ..........farms: 2,533 94 36 5 3 323 - number: 485,342 4,763 538 21 45 10,783 - Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more ............farms: 7,198 291 62 12 19 962 - number: 1,349,720 21,686 4,911 96 750 53,001 - Cattle on feed ..............................farms: 228 9 2 - - 32 - number: 492,887 (D) (D) - - 5,046 - : Hogs and pigs inventory .........................farms: 562 8 11 6 3 44 - number: 21,157 668 70 11 48 577 - Farms with- : 1 to 24 ..........................................: 517 4 11 6 3 41 - 25 to 49 .........................................: 20 1 - - - - - 50 to 99 .........................................: 5 - - - - - - 100 to 199 .......................................: 6 - - - - 3 - 200 to 499 .......................................: 9 3 - - - - - 500 or more ......................................: 5 - - - - - - : Hogs and pigs sold ..............................farms: 663 11 12 7 8 50 - number: 100,260 848 31 175 60 1,396 - $1,000: 23,779 211 (D) (D) (D) 214 - : Sheep and lambs inventory .......................farms: 1,208 16 22 13 10 133 - number: 230,681 11,228 361 161 75 4,407 - Sheep and lambs sold ............................farms: 840 19 12 13 5 73 - number: 198,506 8,190 231 180 403 3,631 - : Total horses and ponies inventory ...............farms: 6,660 154 81 27 25 1,216 - number: 41,412 709 312 86 71 5,844 - Total horses and ponies sold ....................farms: 989 18 3 1 - 77 - number: 3,200 50 (D) (D) - 163 - : Goats, all inventory ............................farms: 1,474 16 41 14 9 149 - number: 24,780 347 254 70 116 3,172 - Goats, all sold .................................farms: 702 10 20 2 1 45 - number: 11,265 195 108 (D) (D) 882 - : POULTRY : : Layers inventory ................................farms: 3,514 42 95 81 70 445 - number: 638,424 8,215 1,837 1,224 1,441 6,472 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net : income of operation: : 1 household ........................................: - 5,923 5,794 98 219 168 568 1,004 2,465 2 households .......................................: - 1,006 823 25 71 11 26 63 287 3 households .......................................: - 259 159 8 15 - 4 7 62 4 households .......................................: - 109 75 1 23 - 3 5 22 5 or more households ...............................: - 98 32 - 6 - - 13 21 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory .....................farms: - 1,267 6,064 126 333 47 159 116 390 number: - 102,089 808,553 369,890 1,161,105 608 1,038 4,790 10,692 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ...........................................: - 391 2,602 6 40 39 123 91 261 10 to 49 .........................................: - 496 1,924 31 17 6 36 18 94 50 to 99 .........................................: - 180 489 26 9 1 - 1 17 100 to 199 .......................................: - 103 377 13 21 - - - 11 200 to 499 .......................................: - 64 419 19 42 1 - 3 2 500 or more ......................................: - 33 253 31 204 - - 3 5 : Cows and heifers that calved ..................farms: - 1,149 5,192 101 333 37 128 74 295 number: - 57,232 325,481 22,314 666,181 262 635 2,354 6,250 : Beef cows ...................................farms: - 1,137 5,171 100 77 32 120 68 282 number: - (D) 323,384 (D) 5,066 (D) 609 2,332 6,084 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................: - 413 2,480 8 29 30 105 54 206 10 to 49 .....................................: - 490 1,545 40 33 1 15 9 57 50 to 99 .....................................: - 112 384 16 3 - - - 8 100 to 199 ...................................: - 74 348 12 6 1 - 1 5 200 to 499 ...................................: - 35 291 12 5 - - 3 2 500 or more ..................................: - 13 123 12 1 - - 1 4 : Milk cows ...................................farms: - 21 110 4 329 8 20 12 28 number: - (D) 2,097 (D) 661,115 (D) 26 22 166 Farms with- : 1 to 9 .......................................: - 19 106 3 48 8 20 12 26 10 to 49 .....................................: - 1 3 - 17 - - - - 50 to 99 .....................................: - - - - 15 - - - 2 100 to 199 ...................................: - - - - 27 - - - - 200 to 499 ...................................: - - - 1 57 - - - - 500 or more ..................................: - 1 1 - 165 - - - - : Other cattle ..................................farms: - 978 4,511 116 292 30 93 82 255 number: - 44,857 483,072 347,576 494,924 346 403 2,436 4,442 : Cattle and calves sold ..........................farms: - 1,011 5,387 132 302 16 41 44 290 number: - 63,784 751,536 495,065 483,859 192 106 1,839 5,871 $1,000: - 69,574 765,731 929,565 367,080 212 85 2,087 6,040 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ..........farms: - 323 1,682 22 236 3 15 15 99 number: - 10,783 207,547 1,888 258,068 18 34 121 1,516 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more ............farms: - 962 5,075 132 297 14 32 43 259 number: - 53,001 543,989 493,177 225,791 174 72 1,718 4,355 Cattle on feed ..............................farms: - 32 31 132 22 - - - - number: - 5,046 4,668 471,765 9,444 - - - - : Hogs and pigs inventory .........................farms: - 44 153 1 9 140 54 50 83 number: - 577 940 (D) 373 17,136 293 (D) 773 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ..........................................: - 41 150 1 6 113 52 50 80 25 to 49 .........................................: - - 3 - - 12 2 - 2 50 to 99 .........................................: - - - - 2 3 - - - 100 to 199 .......................................: - 3 - - - 3 - - - 200 to 499 .......................................: - - - - 1 4 - - 1 500 or more ......................................: - - - - - 5 - - - : Hogs and pigs sold ..............................farms: - 50 180 2 10 179 57 48 99 number: - 1,396 1,175 (D) 346 93,491 (D) 298 2,144 $1,000: - 214 259 (D) 102 22,477 58 (D) 352 : Sheep and lambs inventory .......................farms: - 133 200 5 15 13 72 592 117 number: - 4,407 9,979 (D) (D) 359 622 184,631 14,879 Sheep and lambs sold ............................farms: - 73 111 5 8 4 44 472 74 number: - 3,631 9,605 (D) (D) 28 232 163,338 10,219 : Total horses and ponies inventory ...............farms: - 1,216 2,479 46 50 43 194 223 2,122 number: - 5,844 13,458 298 256 191 717 976 18,494 Total horses and ponies sold ....................farms: - 77 178 5 5 - 8 15 679 number: - 163 840 20 13 - 8 46 2,053 : Goats, all inventory ............................farms: - 149 301 - 16 27 116 585 200 number: - 3,172 3,586 - 342 136 688 14,765 1,304 Goats, all sold .................................farms: - 45 99 - 9 10 36 400 70 number: - 882 1,432 - 238 69 110 7,793 414 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory ................................farms: - 445 1,098 7 39 92 583 383 579 number: - 6,472 14,452 58 965 1,791 587,480 5,088 9,401 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Layers inventory - Con. : : Farms with- : 1 to 399 .........................................: 3,500 38 95 81 70 444 - 400 to 3,199 .....................................: 9 4 - - - 1 - 3,200 to 9,999 ...................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .................................: 1 - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999 .................................: 2 - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999 .................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..................................: 2 - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ..farms: 447 3 12 8 15 32 - number: (D) 18 261 55 226 729 - : Layers sold .....................................farms: 358 7 11 11 5 21 - number: (D) 6,086 396 291 134 301 - : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .......farms: 43 2 - 1 1 3 - number: (D) (D) - (D) (D) 88 - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ......farms: 155 2 5 3 11 18 - number: 11,815 (D) 795 (D) 916 1,699 - Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .......................................: 155 2 5 3 11 18 - 2,000 to 59,999 ..................................: - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..................................: - - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ...............................farms: 297 3 4 3 9 35 - number: 4,644 900 (D) 26 (D) 345 - Turkeys sold ....................................farms: 95 5 6 4 5 16 - number: 4,156 (D) (D) 23 22 735 - : CROPS : : Barley for grain ................................farms: 1,322 545 158 1 5 442 - acres: 538,586 228,586 120,835 (D) (D) 153,775 - bushels: 50,782,418 18,872,751 11,817,522 (D) (D) 16,743,008 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 1,013 367 123 1 5 392 - acres: 348,967 121,340 81,135 (D) (D) 123,069 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 146 64 9 - - 47 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 322 110 29 1 2 104 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 323 159 27 - 3 100 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 243 83 26 - - 113 - 500 acres or more ................................: 288 129 67 - - 78 - : Corn for grain ..................................farms: 648 276 96 7 - 173 - acres: 126,508 46,411 30,687 7 - 28,412 - bushels: 22,937,258 9,035,275 5,256,025 527 - 4,905,475 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 648 276 96 7 - 173 - acres: 126,508 46,411 30,687 7 - 28,412 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 147 60 31 7 - 34 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 216 97 23 - - 58 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 153 62 15 - - 52 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 77 34 12 - - 20 - 500 acres or more ................................: 55 23 15 - - 9 - : Corn for silage or greenchop ....................farms: 772 272 60 2 1 197 - acres: 258,326 87,368 (D) (D) (D) 38,855 - tons: 7,412,427 2,691,457 576,370 (D) (D) 1,089,592 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 770 270 60 2 1 197 - acres: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 38,855 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 97 37 13 1 1 30 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 238 95 17 1 - 54 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 210 70 15 - - 70 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 97 31 3 - - 19 - 500 acres or more ................................: 130 39 12 - - 24 - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and : limas ..........................................farms: 227 101 36 1 - 85 - acres: 35,063 12,404 (D) (D) - 12,338 - cwt: 868,671 305,611 (D) (D) - 296,396 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 213 87 36 1 - 85 - acres: 31,511 8,852 (D) (D) - 12,338 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 37 20 5 - - 10 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 92 37 14 - - 40 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 62 33 6 1 - 21 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 22 7 5 - - 10 - 500 acres or more ................................: 14 4 6 - - 4 - : Oats for grain ..................................farms: 115 47 12 - - 33 - acres: 11,088 4,879 1,322 - - 3,507 - bushels: 704,503 288,855 129,232 - - 211,137 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 41 5 3 - - 20 - acres: 4,324 438 254 - - 3,146 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Layers inventory - Con. : : Farms with- : 1 to 399 .........................................: - 444 1,098 7 39 92 574 383 579 400 to 3,199 .....................................: - 1 - - - - 4 - - 3,200 to 9,999 ...................................: - - - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 .................................: - - - - - - 1 - - 20,000 to 49,999 .................................: - - - - - - 2 - - 50,000 to 99,999 .................................: - - - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..................................: - - - - - - 2 - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ..farms: - 32 101 - 6 12 121 66 71 number: - 729 1,509 - 50 168 (D) 568 864 : Layers sold .....................................farms: - 21 73 - 6 19 102 54 49 number: - 301 1,139 - 82 691 (D) 987 1,943 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .......farms: - 3 5 - - - 18 6 7 number: - 88 80 - - - (D) 30 213 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ......farms: - 18 32 - 1 4 32 27 20 number: - 1,699 1,821 - (D) (D) 3,730 777 754 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 .......................................: - 18 32 - 1 4 32 27 20 2,000 to 59,999 ..................................: - - - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 .................................: - - - - - - - - - 100,000 or more ..................................: - - - - - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ...............................farms: - 35 58 - 8 3 68 49 57 number: - 345 234 - 16 70 345 236 305 Turkeys sold ....................................farms: - 16 11 - 1 2 18 13 14 number: - 735 61 - (D) (D) 167 60 81 : CROPS : : Barley for grain ................................farms: - 442 91 5 57 1 - 8 9 acres: - 153,775 9,485 2,714 20,815 (D) - 907 (D) bushels: - 16,743,008 634,616 391,477 2,062,225 (D) - 135,874 (D) Irrigated .....................................farms: - 392 62 3 46 - - 8 6 acres: - 123,069 4,581 (D) 14,315 - - 907 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - 47 17 - 3 - - 4 2 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 104 49 1 19 - - 2 5 100 to 249 acres .................................: - 100 14 1 15 1 - 1 2 250 to 499 acres .................................: - 113 8 2 11 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - 78 3 1 9 - - 1 - : Corn for grain ..................................farms: - 173 47 6 35 - - 1 7 acres: - 28,412 4,991 2,153 13,564 - - (D) (D) bushels: - 4,905,475 759,881 409,374 2,511,674 - - (D) (D) Irrigated .....................................farms: - 173 47 6 35 - - 1 7 acres: - 28,412 4,991 2,153 13,564 - - (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - 34 9 - 1 - - - 5 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 58 20 2 14 - - - 2 100 to 249 acres .................................: - 52 13 1 9 - - 1 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: - 20 4 1 6 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - 9 1 2 5 - - - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ....................farms: - 197 70 6 155 - - 4 5 acres: - 38,855 8,390 2,237 97,702 - - 295 413 tons: - 1,089,592 201,946 66,835 2,763,734 - - (D) (D) Irrigated .....................................farms: - 197 70 6 155 - - 4 5 acres: - 38,855 8,390 2,237 97,702 - - 295 413 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - 30 10 1 2 - - 1 1 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 54 44 1 22 - - 2 2 100 to 249 acres .................................: - 70 6 2 44 - - 1 2 250 to 499 acres .................................: - 19 7 - 37 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - 24 3 2 50 - - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and : limas ..........................................farms: - 85 2 - 1 - - 1 - acres: - 12,338 (D) - (D) - - (D) - cwt: - 296,396 (D) - (D) - - (D) - Irrigated .....................................farms: - 85 2 - 1 - - 1 - acres: - 12,338 (D) - (D) - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - 10 1 - 1 - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 40 - - - - - 1 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: - 21 1 - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: - 10 - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - 4 - - - - - - - : Oats for grain ..................................farms: - 33 15 3 3 - - 1 1 acres: - 3,507 800 215 (D) - - (D) (D) bushels: - 211,137 34,998 18,500 (D) - - (D) (D) Irrigated .....................................farms: - 20 8 2 2 - - 1 - acres: - 3,146 331 (D) (D) - - (D) - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Oats for grain - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 22 11 1 - - 6 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 60 13 8 - - 25 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 27 21 2 - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 3 1 1 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: 3 1 - - - 2 - : Sorghum for grain ...............................farms: 5 4 - - - - - acres: 485 (D) - - - - - bushels: 52,100 (D) - - - - - Irrigated .....................................farms: 4 4 - - - - - acres: (D) (D) - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 4 4 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 1 - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ..............................farms: 8 5 - - - 3 - acres: 304 (D) - - - (D) - bushels: 9,092 5,717 - - - 3,375 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 5 2 - - - 3 - acres: 205 (D) - - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 8 5 - - - 3 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ............................farms: 452 56 53 1 - 326 - acres: 178,358 9,882 (D) (D) - 120,470 - tons: 6,570,132 363,299 (D) (D) - 4,468,678 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 452 56 53 1 - 326 - acres: 178,358 9,882 (D) (D) - 120,470 - : Sunflower seed, all .............................farms: 10 7 - - - 3 - acres: 938 256 - - - 682 - pounds: 1,500,019 468,500 - - - 1,031,519 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 9 6 - - - 3 - acres: (D) (D) - - - 682 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 4 4 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 3 3 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 2 - - - - 2 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 1 - - - - 1 - 500 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ............................farms: 2,210 1,145 294 2 20 582 - acres: 1,162,597 676,977 258,230 (D) (D) 194,267 - bushels: 93,723,621 49,529,163 22,991,220 (D) (D) 18,636,129 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 1,318 528 231 2 19 438 - acres: 448,708 127,669 173,971 (D) (D) 129,545 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 256 112 17 1 14 80 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 539 241 78 - 3 156 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 480 247 47 - 3 141 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 317 157 47 1 - 95 - 500 acres or more ................................: 618 388 105 - - 110 - : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ....................farms: 10,279 722 236 52 47 5,306 - acres: 1,415,865 179,182 65,607 816 2,163 719,968 - tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 631,342 308,899 3,140 6,288 2,884,779 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 8,042 500 208 36 35 4,073 - acres: 1,102,400 119,222 61,100 658 1,929 552,417 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: 4,884 113 59 46 31 2,585 - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: 2,460 208 65 5 12 1,291 - 100 to 249 acres .................................: 1,560 220 46 - 1 769 - 250 to 499 acres .................................: 703 99 29 1 3 313 - 500 acres or more ................................: 672 82 37 - - 348 - : Alfalfa hay ...................................farms: 7,480 614 206 26 31 3,955 - acres: 1,047,568 129,079 52,905 602 1,273 565,080 - tons, dry: 3,926,331 425,919 233,500 2,860 3,791 2,253,572 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 6,466 450 186 21 25 3,437 - acres: 870,101 92,976 48,495 578 1,203 467,726 - : Other dry hay .................................farms: 3,303 206 46 23 16 1,552 - acres: 251,158 32,578 4,898 195 739 112,866 - tons, dry: 582,333 85,821 14,140 258 2,237 277,019 - Irrigated ...................................farms: 1,993 72 38 11 12 864 - acres: 131,135 9,727 4,801 62 680 50,590 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Oats for grain - Con. : : Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - 6 1 1 2 - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 25 12 - - - - 1 1 100 to 249 acres .................................: - - 2 2 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: - - - - 1 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - 2 - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain ...............................farms: - - - - 1 - - - - acres: - - - - (D) - - - - bushels: - - - - (D) - - - - Irrigated .....................................farms: - - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................: - - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: - - - - 1 - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ..............................farms: - 3 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - bushels: - 3,375 - - - - - - - Irrigated .....................................farms: - 3 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 3 - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................: - - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: - - - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ............................farms: - 326 6 - 6 - - 1 3 acres: - 120,470 (D) - (D) - - (D) 85 tons: - 4,468,678 (D) - (D) - - (D) 3,228 Irrigated .....................................farms: - 326 6 - 6 - - 1 3 acres: - 120,470 (D) - (D) - - (D) 85 : Sunflower seed, all .............................farms: - 3 - - - - - - - acres: - 682 - - - - - - - pounds: - 1,031,519 - - - - - - - Irrigated .....................................farms: - 3 - - - - - - - acres: - 682 - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres .................................: - 2 - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres .................................: - 1 - - - - - - - 500 acres or more ................................: - - - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ............................farms: - 582 100 6 46 2 - 3 10 acres: - 194,267 11,148 3,683 15,459 (D) - (D) 533 bushels: - 18,636,129 663,075 (D) 1,301,044 (D) - (D) 38,487 Irrigated .....................................farms: - 438 56 4 32 1 - 2 5 acres: - 129,545 3,357 (D) 9,790 (D) - (D) 95 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - 80 22 - 4 - - 1 5 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 156 44 3 10 1 - - 3 100 to 249 acres .................................: - 141 24 - 15 1 - - 2 250 to 499 acres .................................: - 95 7 - 9 - - 1 - 500 acres or more ................................: - 110 3 3 8 - - 1 - : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ....................farms: - 5,306 2,481 72 218 42 73 156 874 acres: - 719,968 288,361 18,730 112,355 591 1,014 7,718 19,360 tons, dry equivalent: - 2,884,779 757,145 77,159 625,794 1,506 2,513 25,556 36,999 Irrigated .....................................farms: - 4,073 2,009 61 211 31 59 128 691 acres: - 552,417 220,701 16,101 109,267 531 616 7,207 12,651 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ....................................: - 2,585 1,067 11 21 35 63 120 733 25 to 99 acres ...................................: - 1,291 686 20 29 5 8 21 110 100 to 249 acres .................................: - 769 407 21 61 2 2 9 22 250 to 499 acres .................................: - 313 204 9 36 - - 3 6 500 acres or more ................................: - 348 117 11 71 - - 3 3 : Alfalfa hay ...................................farms: - 3,955 1,752 61 176 24 26 106 503 acres: - 565,080 191,418 12,827 74,682 385 560 6,742 12,015 tons, dry: - 2,253,572 555,655 53,108 344,808 1,346 1,874 22,901 26,997 Irrigated ...................................farms: - 3,437 1,534 55 175 19 23 98 443 acres: - 467,726 159,149 11,351 (D) (D) 421 6,433 8,948 : Other dry hay .................................farms: - 1,552 946 29 44 13 39 42 347 acres: - 112,866 81,812 4,075 6,440 113 348 680 6,414 tons, dry: - 277,019 159,576 8,843 22,782 124 497 2,158 8,878 Irrigated ...................................farms: - 864 657 20 40 8 28 27 216 acres: - 50,590 52,469 3,057 5,817 87 139 555 3,151 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Other crop farming : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : :--------------------------------------- : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Greenhouse, : : : : : Vegetable : Fruit and : nursery, and : : : : Oilseed and : and melon : tree nut : floriculture : : Tobacco : : grain farming : farming : farming : production : : farming Item : Total : (1111) : (1112) : (1113) : (1114) : Total : (11191) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Field and grass seed crops, all .................farms: 187 56 21 - - 106 - acres: 56,098 20,368 2,405 - - 33,032 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 79 4 15 - - 56 - acres: 14,585 364 2,239 - - 11,689 - : Land in vegetables ..............................farms: 1,235 63 767 27 62 271 - acres: 334,276 9,967 267,996 357 (D) (D) - Irrigated .....................................farms: 1,232 63 766 27 62 270 - acres: 334,263 9,967 (D) 356 52 (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................: 527 11 332 23 61 65 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................: 126 14 56 1 1 52 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................: 194 12 116 2 - 61 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................: 132 20 69 1 - 40 - 250.0 acres or more ..............................: 256 6 194 - - 53 - : Beans, snap ...................................farms: 195 - 134 4 12 42 - acres: 5,237 - 2,038 1 3 3,195 - Harvested for processing ....................farms: 19 - 4 - 2 13 - acres: 767 - (D) - (D) 696 - : Peas, green ...................................farms: 105 - 70 - 12 21 - acres: 1,972 - 992 - (D) 978 - Harvested for processing ....................farms: 4 - 1 - - 3 - acres: 190 - (D) - - (D) - Potatoes ......................................farms: 529 24 383 4 16 90 - acres: 301,157 8,157 251,113 (D) (D) 36,682 - Harvested for processing ....................farms: 220 15 142 1 3 53 - acres: 139,548 (D) 103,520 (D) (Z) 27,490 - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................: 118 - 87 3 16 8 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................: 20 - 5 - - 14 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: 90 5 73 1 - 9 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: 78 13 41 - - 22 - 250.0 acres or more ............................: 223 6 177 - - 37 - : Sweet corn (see text) .........................farms: 221 17 147 8 8 38 - acres: 3,282 361 1,691 (D) (D) 1,150 - Harvested for processing ....................farms: 19 5 9 3 2 - - acres: 344 (D) 319 (Z) (D) - - Sweet potatoes ................................farms: 10 - 3 5 1 1 - acres: 1 - (Z) (D) (D) (D) - Harvested for processing ....................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ..........................farms: 215 2 161 14 18 16 - acres: 62 (D) 49 7 (D) 3 - Harvested for processing ....................farms: 16 - 6 4 4 2 - acres: 3 - (D) (Z) (Z) (D) - : Land in orchards ................................farms: 567 4 56 352 35 53 - acres: 5,523 7 32 5,328 19 79 - Irrigated .....................................farms: 565 4 56 350 35 53 - acres: (D) 7 32 5,319 19 78 - Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................: 495 3 55 286 35 51 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................: 57 1 1 51 - 2 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................: 10 - - 10 - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................: 1 - - 1 - - - 250.0 acres or more ..............................: 4 - - 4 - - - : Apples ........................................farms: 320 2 30 204 20 18 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,936 (D) 13 1,864 (D) 14 - : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) .......farms: 137 2 9 94 3 15 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,175 (D) (D) 1,123 1 38 - : Peaches, all ..................................farms: 132 - 9 98 1 12 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,009 - (D) 997 (D) 6 - : Almonds .......................................farms: 8 - - 2 2 1 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 2 - - (D) (D) (D) - : Walnuts, English ..............................farms: 22 - 3 13 - 4 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 19 - (Z) (D) - 2 - : Land in berries .................................farms: 268 2 45 131 24 34 - acres: 207 (D) 17 146 (D) 24 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 75. Summary by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Other crop farming - con. : : : : : : : : (1119) : : : : : : : :---------------------------------: : : : : : : : : Sugarcane : : : : : : : : : farming, hay : : : : : : : : : farming, and : : : : : : : Aquaculture : : all other : Beef cattle : : Dairy cattle : : : : and : Cotton : crop farming : ranching : Cattle : and milk : Hog and pig : Poultry and : Sheep and : other animal : farming : (11193, 11194 : and farming : feedlots : production : farming : egg production :goat farming : production Item : (11192) : 11199) : (112111) : (112112) : (11212) : (1122) : (1123) : (1124) : (1125,1129) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Field and grass seed crops, all .................farms: - 106 4 - - - - - - acres: - 33,032 293 - - - - - - Irrigated .....................................farms: - 56 4 - - - - - - acres: - 11,689 293 - - - - - - : Land in vegetables ..............................farms: - 271 12 1 6 - 6 3 17 acres: - (D) (D) (D) 3,344 - 10 1 34 Irrigated .....................................farms: - 270 11 1 6 - 6 3 17 acres: - (D) (D) (D) 3,344 - 10 1 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................: - 65 10 - 1 - 6 3 15 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................: - 52 - - - - - - 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................: - 61 1 - 2 - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................: - 40 1 - 1 - - - - 250.0 acres or more ..............................: - 53 - 1 2 - - - - : Beans, snap ...................................farms: - 42 1 - - - 1 - 1 acres: - 3,195 (D) - - - (D) - (D) Harvested for processing ....................farms: - 13 - - - - - - - acres: - 696 - - - - - - - : Peas, green ...................................farms: - 21 - - 1 - - 1 - acres: - 978 - - (D) - - (D) - Harvested for processing ....................farms: - 3 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - Potatoes ......................................farms: - 90 3 1 5 - - 1 2 acres: - 36,682 (D) (D) (D) - - (D) (D) Harvested for processing ....................farms: - 53 1 1 4 - - - - acres: - 27,490 (D) (D) (D) - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...............................: - 8 1 - 1 - - 1 1 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..............................: - 14 - - - - - - 1 25.0 to 99.9 acres .............................: - 9 1 - 1 - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ...........................: - 22 1 - 1 - - - - 250.0 acres or more ............................: - 37 - 1 2 - - - - : Sweet corn (see text) .........................farms: - 38 - - 1 - - - 2 acres: - 1,150 - - (D) - - - (D) Harvested for processing ....................farms: - - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - - Sweet potatoes ................................farms: - 1 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - Harvested for processing ....................farms: - - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ..........................farms: - 16 2 - - - - - 2 acres: - 3 (D) - - - - - (D) Harvested for processing ....................farms: - 2 - - - - - - - acres: - (D) - - - - - - - : Land in orchards ................................farms: - 53 21 1 1 - 11 14 19 acres: - 79 23 (D) (D) - 6 (D) 21 Irrigated .....................................farms: - 53 21 1 1 - 11 14 19 acres: - 78 (D) (D) (D) - 6 (D) 21 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres .................................: - 51 20 1 1 - 11 14 18 5.0 to 24.9 acres ................................: - 2 1 - - - - - 1 25.0 to 99.9 acres ...............................: - - - - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .............................: - - - - - - - - - 250.0 acres or more ..............................: - - - - - - - - - : Apples ........................................farms: - 18 16 1 1 - 6 14 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: - 14 15 (D) (D) - 3 (D) 13 : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) .......farms: - 15 3 - 1 - 1 5 4 bearing and nonbearing acres: - 38 (Z) - (D) - (D) (D) 2 : Peaches, all ..................................farms: - 12 6 - - - 2 2 2 bearing and nonbearing acres: - 6 3 - - - (D) (D) (D) : Almonds .......................................farms: - 1 - - - - - 2 1 bearing and nonbearing acres: - (D) - - - - - (D) (D) : Walnuts, English ..............................farms: - 4 1 - - - 1 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: - 2 (D) - - - (D) - - : Land in berries .................................farms: - 34 8 1 - - 6 5 12 acres: - 24 4 (D) - - 1 (D) 7 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included with total farm production expenses. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. 3/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 percent: 100.0 74.9 19.5 5.6 Land in farms ............................................acres: 11,547,963 4,752,115 5,825,698 970,150 Average size of farm .................................acres: 505 277 1,305 753 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 $1,000: 11,024,607 3,679,668 6,019,059 1,325,880 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 481,908 214,871 1,348,658 1,028,612 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 5,317 4,802 334 181 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 2,873 2,607 187 79 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 2,357 2,121 167 69 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 2,526 2,191 255 80 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 2,368 1,863 383 122 : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,551 1,057 398 96 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,228 760 332 136 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 1,415 717 578 120 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 1,102 442 515 145 : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 778 222 459 97 $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 1,362 343 855 164 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 639 168 383 88 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 373 60 274 39 $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 350 115 198 37 : Total sales ............................................farms: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 $1,000: 10,892,201 3,636,475 5,943,551 1,312,175 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 3,530 1,264 1,843 423 $1,000: 1,626,831 237,733 1,180,604 208,494 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,497 652 1,504 341 $1,000: 1,607,176 227,003 1,173,347 206,827 Corn ...............................................farms: 1,117 389 614 114 $1,000: 405,868 76,783 298,399 30,686 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 788 217 477 94 $1,000: 398,382 73,422 294,811 30,149 Wheat ..............................................farms: 2,203 669 1,253 281 $1,000: 744,115 95,643 529,951 118,520 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1,538 321 998 219 $1,000: 730,200 89,071 524,001 117,128 Soybeans ...........................................farms: 8 6 1 1 $1,000: 135 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: 6 4 2 - $1,000: 337 (D) (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 - 2 - $1,000: (D) - (D) - Barley .............................................farms: 1,319 378 785 156 $1,000: 349,414 (D) 265,402 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 838 168 554 116 $1,000: 341,143 48,537 261,119 31,486 Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 771 188 473 110 $1,000: 126,961 (D) 86,644 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 479 84 312 83 $1,000: 121,065 11,358 83,312 26,395 Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 1,231 584 548 99 $1,000: 1,597,035 192,287 1,202,528 202,220 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 679 129 479 71 $1,000: 1,591,765 188,748 1,201,290 201,726 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 561 489 51 21 $1,000: 31,693 6,425 24,753 514 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 38 27 8 3 $1,000: 27,916 3,026 24,470 420 Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 446 392 38 16 $1,000: 29,683 5,132 24,110 441 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 29 19 7 3 $1,000: 26,766 2,413 (D) (D) Berries ............................................farms: 234 197 26 11 $1,000: 2,010 1,293 644 73 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 7 6 1 - $1,000: 943 (D) (D) - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 599 492 62 45 $1,000: 122,254 47,205 51,623 23,426 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 183 126 32 25 $1,000: 117,897 43,527 51,199 23,171 Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 47 39 7 1 $1,000: 673 (D) (D) (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops - Con. : : Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 1 - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) - (D) Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 47 39 7 1 $1,000: 673 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 - 1 $1,000: (D) (D) - (D) Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 7,813 5,068 2,255 490 $1,000: 1,386,308 294,046 912,427 179,835 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,501 838 1,357 306 $1,000: 1,335,712 261,383 897,695 176,633 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - $1,000: - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 7,630 5,002 2,173 455 $1,000: 2,175,548 1,146,313 600,720 428,516 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,047 938 958 151 $1,000: 2,114,032 1,108,205 581,249 424,577 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 330 178 132 20 $1,000: 3,727,378 1,555,500 1,932,764 239,114 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 295 151 124 20 $1,000: 3,727,100 1,555,370 1,932,616 239,114 Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 663 525 117 21 $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 18 9 8 1 $1,000: 22,239 (D) (D) (D) Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 1,454 1,194 210 50 $1,000: 46,709 23,150 22,364 1,195 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 50 24 22 4 $1,000: 40,891 18,544 21,420 927 Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 1,028 772 214 42 $1,000: 12,951 9,484 2,719 748 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 54 38 13 3 $1,000: 4,770 3,118 1,203 450 Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 1,751 1,491 219 41 $1,000: 40,298 34,547 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 15 9 5 1 $1,000: 37,584 32,307 (D) (D) Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 51 42 4 5 $1,000: 76,464 71,235 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 39 32 3 4 $1,000: 76,279 (D) (D) (D) Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 585 468 91 26 $1,000: 24,281 14,292 6,050 3,940 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 65 42 15 8 $1,000: 22,371 12,822 5,691 3,858 : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 4,296 2,492 1,528 276 $1,000: 132,405 43,192 75,508 13,705 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 719 - 571 148 $1,000: 99,099 - 79,394 19,705 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 1,499 1,198 244 57 $1,000: 20,984 13,933 6,002 1,049 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 638 433 165 40 $1,000: 57,669 14,438 30,485 12,747 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 $1,000: 9,317,904 3,196,299 4,989,989 1,131,616 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 407,304 186,645 1,118,080 877,902 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 9,896 6,134 3,087 675 $1,000: 765,559 127,854 549,322 88,384 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 5,657 4,644 835 178 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,673 883 624 166 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 636 223 335 78 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,930 384 1,293 253 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 10,419 6,670 3,066 683 $1,000: 410,258 60,971 302,405 46,881 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,344 5,746 1,313 285 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,444 634 641 169 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 523 135 306 82 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,108 155 806 147 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 7,732 4,545 2,588 599 $1,000: 378,944 62,618 271,618 44,708 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 2,522 2,162 277 83 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,881 1,285 504 92 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,602 724 683 195 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 515 179 273 63 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,212 195 851 166 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 1,065 656 360 49 $1,000: 4,094 997 2,807 291 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 6,503 4,663 1,517 323 $1,000: 722,700 400,640 155,420 166,640 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 4,196 3,361 660 175 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,502 939 470 93 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 476 214 232 30 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 140 57 78 5 $250,000 or more ........................................: 189 92 77 20 : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 3,243 1,959 1,054 230 $1,000: 121,882 55,998 46,013 19,871 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 4,301 3,394 770 137 $1,000: 600,818 344,641 109,407 146,770 : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 13,525 10,254 2,578 693 $1,000: 2,598,813 1,249,659 1,050,679 298,475 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 8,387 6,972 1,060 355 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,621 2,497 909 215 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 912 483 359 70 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 207 100 90 17 $250,000 or more ........................................: 398 202 160 36 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 21,557 15,924 4,416 1,217 $1,000: 395,457 113,924 243,862 37,671 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 15,681 13,280 1,771 630 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,613 2,021 1,250 342 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 862 282 475 105 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,401 341 920 140 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 15,852 11,022 3,925 905 $1,000: 357,174 107,371 213,779 36,024 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 4,788 4,038 604 146 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 6,414 4,887 1,219 308 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,982 1,600 1,112 270 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 605 205 325 75 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,063 292 665 106 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 18,678 13,279 4,258 1,141 $1,000: 632,154 195,930 376,643 59,581 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 11,397 9,587 1,318 492 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 4,430 2,797 1,291 342 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,046 415 504 127 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,805 480 1,145 180 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 5,697 3,048 2,181 468 $1,000: 1,043,118 329,198 606,107 107,813 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,583 1,211 294 78 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,302 761 420 121 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,427 644 651 132 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 639 204 379 56 $250,000 or more ........................................: 746 228 437 81 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 2,547 1,469 871 207 $1,000: 101,956 27,484 59,515 14,957 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 452 363 79 10 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 752 563 140 49 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 753 376 320 57 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 256 98 121 37 $50,000 or more .........................................: 334 69 211 54 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 5,857 3,531 1,859 467 $1,000: 247,148 84,069 133,471 29,609 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 1,290 1,097 153 40 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,893 1,382 432 79 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,497 670 644 183 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 401 139 201 61 $50,000 or more .........................................: 776 243 429 104 : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 5,471 959 3,493 1,019 $1,000: 550,451 29,652 406,473 114,325 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees - Con. : : Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,036 487 1,210 339 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 590 121 342 127 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 871 169 539 163 $25,000 or more .........................................: 1,974 182 1,402 390 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 1,821 865 739 217 $1,000: 80,056 15,858 51,793 12,404 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 408 285 89 34 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 436 269 134 33 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 516 210 227 79 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 151 44 91 16 $50,000 or more .........................................: 310 57 198 55 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 6,805 4,049 2,335 421 $1,000: 286,045 95,555 177,227 13,263 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,537 1,740 582 215 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,688 1,729 839 120 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,113 426 625 62 $100,000 or more ........................................: 467 154 289 24 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 4,788 3,114 1,674 - $1,000: 188,811 64,930 123,881 - Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 429 320 109 - $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,138 857 281 - $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 2,184 1,508 676 - $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 452 202 250 - $50,000 or more .......................................: 585 227 358 - : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 4,230 2,221 1,588 421 $1,000: 97,234 30,625 53,346 13,263 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 780 531 195 54 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,752 1,136 455 161 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 1,098 407 571 120 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 288 74 167 47 $50,000 or more .......................................: 312 73 200 39 : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 21,486 16,780 4,360 346 $1,000: 128,588 69,661 54,892 4,036 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 17,581 14,537 2,824 220 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,036 1,327 652 57 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,125 582 498 45 $25,000 or more .........................................: 744 334 386 24 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 9,388 6,540 2,311 537 $1,000: 172,113 76,052 81,113 14,948 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,856 5,789 1,646 421 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,128 569 470 89 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 143 60 78 5 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 91 41 43 7 $100,000 or more ........................................: 170 81 74 15 : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 12,433 7,985 3,604 844 $1,000: 447,370 149,805 255,669 41,896 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,586 5,845 1,367 374 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,987 1,637 1,118 232 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 634 174 378 82 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 642 176 380 86 $100,000 or more ........................................: 584 153 361 70 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 867 154 529 184 $1,000: 36,781 967 28,064 7,750 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 15,202 10,371 3,825 1,006 $1,000: 892,639 273,996 538,694 79,950 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 $1,000: 2,034,090 624,050 1,181,999 228,041 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 88,914 36,441 264,844 176,913 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 8,958 5,666 2,619 673 Average net gain .................................dollars: 275,011 149,172 517,922 389,159 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 625 556 49 20 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,519 1,290 165 64 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 841 649 135 57 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,326 958 272 96 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,020 658 306 56 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,627 1,555 1,692 380 : Farms with net losses .................................number: 13,919 11,459 1,844 616 Average net loss .................................dollars: 30,854 19,300 94,598 54,973 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : Farms with net losses - Con. : : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 848 779 50 19 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,810 3,406 268 136 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,928 2,523 294 111 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,582 2,918 500 164 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,445 1,117 261 67 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,306 716 471 119 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 $1,000: 1,897,116 596,581 1,123,109 177,426 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 82,927 34,837 251,649 137,646 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 8,919 5,667 2,600 652 Average net gain .................................dollars: 263,468 144,292 506,933 328,442 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 636 558 63 15 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,511 1,284 165 62 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 846 658 137 51 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,342 960 286 96 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 994 656 275 63 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,590 1,551 1,674 365 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 13,958 11,458 1,863 637 Average net loss .................................dollars: 32,437 19,298 104,625 57,642 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 843 777 47 19 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,827 3,421 267 139 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,922 2,507 300 115 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,574 2,915 491 168 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,453 1,119 260 74 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,339 719 498 122 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 39 8 26 5 $1,000: 5,255 (D) 4,264 (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 7,733 4,953 2,274 506 $1,000: 327,387 140,681 152,930 33,777 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 1,707 760 764 183 $1,000: 65,446 13,254 45,576 6,617 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 3,629 2,822 685 122 $1,000: 116,760 72,939 37,451 6,370 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 426 336 76 14 $1,000: 10,515 8,847 1,570 98 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 200 149 41 10 $1,000: 16,909 11,858 2,040 3,011 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 2,432 1,053 1,134 245 $1,000: 27,917 4,377 19,245 4,296 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 966 375 484 107 $1,000: 51,896 10,266 35,127 6,503 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 129 70 52 7 $1,000: 982 305 614 63 Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 870 538 280 52 $1,000: 36,961 18,835 11,307 6,820 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 15,823 11,142 3,831 850 acres: 5,623,516 1,544,832 3,484,960 593,724 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 13,037 8,602 3,635 800 acres: 4,370,363 940,413 2,927,278 502,672 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 7,454 6,316 900 238 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 1,154 726 345 83 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 1,197 636 446 115 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 1,342 506 703 133 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 826 252 460 114 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: 519 96 370 53 2,000 acres or more .....................................: 545 70 411 64 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 1,737 1,168 503 66 acres: 214,761 68,586 129,137 17,038 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 983 639 305 39 acres: 59,462 25,844 29,501 4,117 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 3,822 2,963 724 135 acres: 660,805 422,152 209,567 29,086 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 1,696 886 689 121 acres: 318,125 87,837 189,477 40,811 : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 3,406 2,782 556 68 acres: 479,705 307,933 147,184 24,588 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total woodland - Con. : : Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 1,561 1,139 378 44 acres: 250,428 112,916 115,868 21,644 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 2,265 1,966 267 32 acres: 229,277 195,017 31,316 2,944 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 12,204 9,233 2,445 526 acres: 5,012,618 2,682,757 2,002,167 327,694 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 13,192 10,511 2,404 277 acres: 432,124 216,593 191,387 24,144 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 14,191 10,121 3,302 768 acres: 3,167,499 797,904 2,070,084 299,511 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 10,389 6,876 2,893 620 acres: 2,904,105 667,974 1,952,881 283,250 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 6,620 5,159 1,245 216 acres: 263,394 129,930 117,203 16,261 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 1,681 1,334 296 51 acres: 423,658 312,248 95,963 15,447 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 2,599 873 1,391 335 acres: 2,933,445 425,909 2,096,327 411,209 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 227 115 91 21 $1,000: 166,224 48,890 109,518 7,816 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 $1,000: 48,610,483 18,512,682 25,642,550 4,455,251 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,124,863 1,081,033 5,745,586 3,456,362 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,209 3,896 4,402 4,592 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,300 1,088 52 160 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,091 940 71 80 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 1,951 1,677 158 116 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 5,883 5,163 513 207 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 5,555 4,690 708 157 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 2,930 1,966 794 170 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 2,186 1,033 957 196 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 969 349 523 97 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 1,012 219 687 106 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 22,877 17,125 4,463 1,289 $1,000: 4,930,153 1,783,404 2,669,463 477,286 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 1,609 1,463 64 82 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 1,735 1,562 107 66 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 2,733 2,422 201 110 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 5,105 4,318 573 214 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 4,134 3,302 637 195 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 3,057 2,162 722 173 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 2,429 1,347 865 217 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 2,075 549 1,294 232 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 18,416 13,111 4,243 1,062 number: 54,948 27,086 23,424 4,438 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 16,968 11,998 4,087 883 number: 42,226 22,759 16,624 2,843 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 7,400 5,845 1,323 232 number: 9,283 7,103 1,857 323 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 9,749 6,681 2,573 495 number: 14,421 9,037 4,607 777 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 6,684 3,336 2,755 593 number: 18,522 6,619 10,160 1,743 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 2,292 722 1,316 254 number: 3,237 915 1,964 358 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - number: - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 2,307 1,251 909 147 number: 2,680 1,384 1,110 186 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 6,213 3,644 2,207 362 number: 7,569 4,208 2,913 448 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 8,673 5,069 2,952 652 acres treated: 3,496,612 685,219 2,362,476 448,917 Manure used ..............................................farms: 3,432 2,225 1,059 148 acres treated: 331,595 94,566 213,658 23,371 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 497 359 103 35 acres treated: 55,232 21,202 23,013 11,017 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 2,975 1,360 1,270 345 acres: 1,304,919 190,553 933,970 180,396 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 8,233 4,939 2,683 611 acres: 3,216,414 618,187 2,167,015 431,212 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 714 253 383 78 acres: 311,847 39,296 228,457 44,094 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 1,321 488 655 178 acres: 759,333 79,262 540,061 140,010 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 877 259 516 102 acres on which used: 305,558 33,198 232,974 39,386 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 405 218 158 29 acres: 74,786 8,776 52,266 13,744 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 2,229 1,612 436 181 acres: 217,276 54,031 128,998 34,247 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 427 345 70 12 acres: 166,621 69,411 72,903 24,307 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 1,798 1,046 598 154 acres: 641,103 108,659 425,111 107,333 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 2,102 987 933 182 acres: 983,544 138,231 739,681 105,632 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 4,226 2,057 1,756 413 acres: 1,842,044 353,472 1,241,885 246,687 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 1,326 821 430 75 acres: 127,777 41,808 77,831 8,138 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 2,717 1,019 1,315 383 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 1,682 1,281 318 83 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 1,427 1,083 272 72 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 99 67 25 7 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 10 6 4 - Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 191 170 17 4 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 82 51 24 7 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 83 56 23 4 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 17,125 17,125 - - Part owners ..............................................farms: 4,463 - 4,463 - Tenants ..................................................farms: 1,289 - - 1,289 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 21,665 17,125 4,463 77 acres: 8,813,519 5,639,126 3,158,392 16,001 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 21,588 17,125 4,463 - acres: 7,737,908 4,752,115 2,985,793 - : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 5,829 77 4,463 1,289 acres: 3,852,080 9,794 2,859,423 982,863 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 5,752 - 4,463 1,289 acres: 3,810,055 - 2,839,905 970,150 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 3,262 2,511 631 120 acres: 1,117,636 896,805 192,117 28,714 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 44,714 33,019 9,186 2,509 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 6,958 5,129 1,312 517 2 producers ...............................................: 12,840 10,025 2,269 546 3 producers ...............................................: 1,621 1,020 484 117 4 producers ...............................................: 910 580 253 77 5 or more producers .......................................: 548 371 145 32 : Total male producers ........................................: 27,035 19,322 6,009 1,704 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 17,639 13,543 3,210 886 2 producers .............................................: 2,533 1,522 785 226 3 producers .............................................: 838 532 235 71 4 producers .............................................: 193 94 80 19 5 or more producers .....................................: 173 130 33 10 : Total female producers ......................................: 17,679 13,697 3,177 805 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 14,310 11,280 2,438 592 2 producers .............................................: 1,105 777 253 75 3 producers .............................................: 163 115 41 7 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS - Con. : : Total producers - Con. : Total female producers - Con. : Farms by number of female producers: - Con. : : 4 producers .............................................: 83 52 25 6 5 or more producers .....................................: 58 54 2 2 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 26,384 18,881 5,856 1,647 Female ......................................................: 16,949 13,162 3,038 749 : Hired managers ................................................: 3,382 1,397 1,722 263 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 17,793 11,459 5,049 1,285 Other .......................................................: 25,540 20,584 3,845 1,111 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 33,141 24,822 7,042 1,277 Not on farm operated ........................................: 10,192 7,221 1,852 1,119 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 16,151 11,632 3,660 859 Any .........................................................: 27,182 20,411 5,234 1,537 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 4,566 3,401 880 285 50 to 99 days .............................................: 2,032 1,495 454 83 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 3,482 2,501 768 213 200 days or more ..........................................: 17,102 13,014 3,132 956 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 2,561 1,962 364 235 3 or 4 years ................................................: 4,392 3,449 643 300 5 to 9 years ................................................: 9,426 7,126 1,651 649 10 years or more ............................................: 26,954 19,506 6,236 1,212 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 19.0 18.5 22.1 14.8 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 7,099 5,596 1,016 487 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 7,699 5,856 1,279 564 11 years or more ............................................: 28,535 20,591 6,599 1,345 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 21.7 21.1 25.0 17.9 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 832 533 208 91 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 3,027 1,615 901 511 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 6,911 4,687 1,652 572 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 7,320 5,382 1,551 387 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 10,123 7,630 2,082 411 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 10,095 8,029 1,760 306 75 years and over ...........................................: 5,025 4,167 740 118 : Average age .................................................: 56.6 58.1 53.9 47.7 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 3,859 2,148 1,109 602 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 1,341 1,049 219 73 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 290 214 48 28 Asian .......................................................: 144 85 40 19 Black or African American ...................................: 19 16 3 - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 42 27 7 8 White .......................................................: 42,509 31,444 8,745 2,320 More than one race reported .................................: 329 257 51 21 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 39,671 28,924 8,479 2,268 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 3,662 3,119 415 128 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 86,167 60,568 19,945 5,654 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 37,172 27,377 7,774 2,021 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 32,598 23,849 7,011 1,738 Livestock decisions .........................................: 26,379 19,716 5,380 1,283 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 25,823 17,763 6,462 1,598 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 30,863 22,236 6,795 1,832 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 23,727 17,223 5,333 1,171 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 21,570 16,310 4,096 1,164 acres: 9,774,644 4,048,957 4,909,646 816,041 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 3,390 2,185 919 286 acres: 2,655,263 938,911 1,449,222 267,130 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 18,427 14,412 3,086 929 acres: 4,611,219 1,837,165 2,417,897 356,157 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES - Con. : : Partnership ..............................................farms: 1,752 1,004 574 174 acres: 2,798,624 770,553 1,686,416 341,655 Registered under State law .............................farms: 1,562 871 538 153 acres: 2,678,784 727,311 1,624,025 327,448 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 2,145 1,238 738 169 acres: 3,033,242 1,241,310 (D) (D) Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 1,069 667 147 acres: 2,758,073 1,158,880 1,398,346 200,847 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 35 25 8 2 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 1,848 1,044 659 145 : Other than family held .................................farms: 262 169 71 22 acres: 275,169 82,430 (D) (D) More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 32 23 8 1 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 230 146 63 21 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 553 471 65 17 acres: 1,104,878 903,087 (D) (D) : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 5,697 3,048 2,181 468 workers: 42,990 15,231 23,119 4,640 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 3,478 1,575 1,595 308 workers: 21,741 7,477 11,857 2,407 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 3,988 2,142 1,509 337 workers: 21,249 7,754 11,262 2,233 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 714 176 455 83 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 32 19 4 9 Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 8,421 6,533 1,504 384 workers: 21,358 16,312 4,027 1,019 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 5,785 5,363 204 218 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 6,977 5,974 743 260 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 881 676 151 54 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 1,133 885 203 45 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 960 647 235 78 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 927 649 219 59 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 517 335 124 58 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 432 266 126 40 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 1,566 889 537 140 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 1,384 699 557 128 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 1,048 382 580 86 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 1,267 360 784 123 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 1,681 671 768 242 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 767 373 321 73 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 401 366 25 10 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 555 472 42 41 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 7,395 5,730 1,332 333 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 7,395 5,730 1,332 333 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 6,883 5,121 1,371 391 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 132 73 53 6 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 334 190 124 20 Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 179 158 12 9 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 601 557 33 11 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 1,092 959 93 40 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 2,857 2,455 289 113 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 17,963 15,023 2,183 757 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 1,235 596 526 113 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 1,207 406 656 145 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 875 191 563 121 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 290 94 168 28 Non-family farms ............................................: 1,307 815 367 125 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 19,417 14,230 4,058 1,129 Dial-up ...................................................: 537 405 112 20 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 10,022 7,198 2,246 578 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 12,438 8,741 2,878 819 Satellite .................................................: 5,457 4,120 1,079 258 Don't know ................................................: 905 704 146 55 Other .....................................................: 304 236 51 17 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 18,831 14,503 3,345 983 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: - Con. : : 2 households ................................................: 2,888 1,897 770 221 3 households ................................................: 661 396 213 52 4 households ................................................: 291 184 87 20 5 or more households ........................................: 206 145 48 13 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 8,956 6,133 2,288 535 number: 2,517,987 1,116,301 1,128,805 272,881 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 3,651 3,142 370 139 10 to 49 ..................................................: 2,769 1,848 725 196 50 to 99 ..................................................: 770 377 324 69 100 to 199 ................................................: 606 260 286 60 200 to 499 ................................................: 607 270 301 36 500 or more ...............................................: 553 236 282 35 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 7,712 5,113 2,120 479 number: 1,113,728 465,710 578,566 69,452 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 7,379 4,895 2,023 461 number: 449,249 204,884 213,759 30,606 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 3,402 2,778 466 158 10 to 49 ..............................................: 2,343 1,435 724 184 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 251 268 62 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 210 277 30 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 158 197 20 500 or more ...........................................: 161 63 91 7 : Milk cows ............................................farms: 549 348 170 31 number: 664,479 260,826 364,807 38,846 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 259 202 46 11 10 to 49 ..............................................: 21 13 6 2 50 to 99 ..............................................: 17 6 11 - 100 to 199 ............................................: 27 10 11 6 200 to 499 ............................................: 58 36 20 2 500 or more ...........................................: 167 81 76 10 : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 6,745 4,248 2,060 437 number: 1,404,259 650,591 550,239 203,429 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 7,630 5,002 2,173 455 number: 1,835,062 964,238 595,525 275,299 $1,000: 2,175,548 1,146,313 600,720 428,516 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 2,533 1,619 761 153 number: 485,342 261,160 176,226 47,956 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 7,198 4,660 2,110 428 number: 1,349,720 703,078 419,299 227,343 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 228 107 113 8 number: 492,887 282,211 (D) (D) : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 562 444 98 20 number: 21,157 9,576 (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 517 418 83 16 25 to 49 ..................................................: 20 11 6 3 50 to 99 ..................................................: 5 5 - - 100 to 199 ................................................: 6 3 3 - 200 to 499 ................................................: 9 4 5 - 500 or more ...............................................: 5 3 1 1 : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 663 525 117 21 number: 100,260 20,908 (D) (D) $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) (D) : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 1,208 983 194 31 number: 230,681 118,574 107,430 4,677 Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 840 676 144 20 number: 198,506 94,637 99,273 4,596 : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 6,660 4,927 1,437 296 number: 41,412 27,340 10,800 3,272 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 989 746 201 42 number: 3,200 1,962 1,073 165 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 1,474 1,271 155 48 number: 24,780 17,572 5,439 1,769 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 702 583 84 35 number: 11,265 8,172 2,504 589 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 3,514 2,989 442 83 number: 638,424 571,567 (D) (D) Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 3,500 2,983 436 81 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 9 3 5 1 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: 1 - 1 - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 2 1 - 1 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: 2 2 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 447 388 52 7 number: (D) (D) 757 720 : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 358 308 43 7 number: (D) (D) 6,693 70 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 43 40 1 2 number: (D) (D) (D) (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 155 134 17 4 number: 11,815 9,235 2,442 138 Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 155 134 17 4 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 297 258 39 - number: 4,644 3,386 1,258 - Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 95 79 16 - number: 4,156 2,687 1,469 - : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 1,322 379 787 156 acres: 538,586 81,471 408,411 48,704 bushels: 50,782,418 8,269,179 38,046,138 4,467,101 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,013 302 590 121 acres: 348,967 59,620 259,690 29,657 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 146 94 41 11 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 322 112 178 32 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 323 81 188 54 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 243 48 154 41 500 acres or more .........................................: 288 44 226 18 : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 648 210 377 61 acres: 126,508 28,631 89,054 8,823 bushels: 22,937,258 5,559,228 15,789,004 1,589,026 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 648 210 377 61 acres: 126,508 28,631 89,054 8,823 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 147 69 68 10 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 216 81 115 20 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 153 35 96 22 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 77 12 58 7 500 acres or more .........................................: 55 13 40 2 : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 772 271 434 67 acres: 258,326 56,342 188,232 13,752 tons: 7,412,427 1,587,407 5,437,578 387,442 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 770 269 434 67 acres: (D) (D) 188,232 13,752 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 97 56 40 1 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 238 87 121 30 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 210 68 117 25 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 97 29 64 4 500 acres or more .........................................: 130 31 92 7 : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 227 58 131 38 acres: 35,063 3,733 24,059 7,271 cwt: 868,671 90,143 571,772 206,756 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 213 57 119 37 acres: 31,511 (D) 20,790 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 37 19 10 8 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 92 29 52 11 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 62 8 42 12 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 22 1 16 5 500 acres or more .........................................: 14 1 11 2 : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 115 27 84 4 acres: 11,088 1,871 8,882 335 bushels: 704,503 135,317 532,775 36,411 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 41 10 29 2 acres: 4,324 (D) 3,299 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 22 8 14 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 60 8 49 3 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 27 11 15 1 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 3 - 3 - 500 acres or more .........................................: 3 - 3 - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 5 4 1 - acres: 485 (D) (D) - bushels: 52,100 (D) (D) - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 4 - - acres: (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 4 4 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 - 1 - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 8 6 1 1 acres: 304 (D) (D) (D) bushels: 9,092 (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 3 1 1 acres: 205 (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 8 6 1 1 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 452 81 270 101 acres: 178,358 14,702 127,514 36,142 tons: 6,570,132 556,454 4,696,286 1,317,392 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 452 81 270 101 acres: 178,358 14,702 127,514 36,142 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: 10 5 5 - acres: 938 121 817 - pounds: 1,500,019 304,000 1,196,019 - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 9 5 4 - acres: (D) 121 (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 4 - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 3 1 2 - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 2 - 2 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 - 1 - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 2,210 675 1,254 281 acres: 1,162,597 182,061 796,185 184,351 bushels: 93,723,621 12,276,983 65,974,715 15,471,923 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,318 430 727 161 acres: 448,708 66,370 327,792 54,546 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 256 161 78 17 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 539 207 253 79 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 480 161 265 54 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 317 67 215 35 500 acres or more .........................................: 618 79 443 96 : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 10,279 6,828 2,952 499 acres: 1,415,865 497,857 817,330 100,678 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 1,682,467 3,281,489 397,164 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 8,042 5,286 2,352 404 acres: 1,102,400 392,843 632,943 76,614 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4,884 4,193 588 103 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 2,460 1,524 760 176 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1,560 695 744 121 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 703 222 434 47 500 acres or more .........................................: 672 194 426 52 : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 7,480 4,619 2,454 407 acres: 1,047,568 355,880 619,285 72,403 tons, dry: 3,926,331 1,197,800 2,433,684 294,847 Irrigated ............................................farms: 6,466 4,034 2,083 349 acres: 870,101 297,018 512,357 60,726 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 3,303 2,176 979 148 acres: 251,158 97,235 131,120 22,803 tons, dry: 582,333 191,119 333,576 57,638 Irrigated ............................................farms: 1,993 1,322 578 93 acres: 131,135 58,181 62,085 10,869 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 187 50 109 28 acres: 56,098 7,046 41,178 7,874 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 79 20 47 12 acres: 14,585 797 10,443 3,345 : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 1,235 589 547 99 acres: 334,276 33,144 255,978 45,153 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,232 587 546 99 acres: 334,263 (D) (D) 45,153 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 527 446 59 22 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 126 59 51 16 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 194 39 139 16 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 132 17 104 11 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 256 28 194 34 : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 195 123 61 11 acres: 5,237 293 4,810 134 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 6 13 - acres: 767 88 679 - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 105 59 42 4 acres: 1,972 (D) 1,940 (D) Harvested for processing .............................farms: 4 1 3 - acres: 190 (D) (D) - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 529 179 306 44 acres: 301,157 30,478 230,029 40,650 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 220 42 151 27 acres: 139,548 12,384 105,317 21,846 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 118 93 22 3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 76. Summary by Tenure of Farm Operation: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Total : Full owners : Part owners : Tenants -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in vegetables - Con. : Potatoes - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: 20 17 3 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 90 26 58 6 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 78 16 54 8 250.0 acres or more .....................................: 223 27 169 27 : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 221 123 79 19 acres: 3,282 253 2,280 749 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 8 11 - acres: 344 19 325 - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 10 9 1 - acres: 1 (D) (D) - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - acres: - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 215 184 19 12 acres: 62 44 7 11 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 16 13 1 2 acres: 3 (D) (D) (D) : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 567 499 45 23 acres: 5,523 1,475 3,926 122 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 565 497 45 23 acres: (D) (D) 3,926 122 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 495 442 34 19 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 57 49 5 3 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 10 6 3 1 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 1 - - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 4 1 3 - : Apples .................................................farms: 320 279 26 15 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,936 387 (D) (D) : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 137 113 20 4 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,175 434 721 21 : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 132 113 9 10 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,009 (D) (D) 3 : Almonds ................................................farms: 8 5 2 1 bearing and nonbearing acres: 2 (D) (D) (D) : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 22 20 2 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 19 (D) (D) - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 268 231 26 11 acres: 207 150 53 4 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included with total farm production expenses. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. 3/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ...................................................number: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 percent: 100.0 30.4 56.1 11.1 2.4 Land in farms ............................................acres: 11,547,963 3,142,351 4,862,806 2,832,373 710,433 Average size of farm .................................acres: 505 452 379 1,119 1,296 : MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total ....................................................farms: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 $1,000: 11,024,607 2,833,255 4,042,802 2,974,801 1,173,749 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 481,908 407,194 314,860 1,175,346 2,141,878 : Farms by economic class: : Less than $1,000 ..........................................: 5,317 1,685 3,108 406 118 $1,000 to $2,499 ..........................................: 2,873 838 1,795 201 39 $2,500 to $4,999 ..........................................: 2,357 657 1,491 156 53 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 2,526 721 1,558 203 44 $10,000 to $24,999 ........................................: 2,368 715 1,362 249 42 : $25,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 1,551 456 839 202 54 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,228 403 644 151 30 $100,000 to $249,999 ......................................: 1,415 474 677 219 45 $250,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 1,102 394 529 167 12 : $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 778 240 354 167 17 $1,000,000 or more ........................................: 1,362 375 483 410 94 $1,000,000 to $2,499,999 ................................: 639 196 234 189 20 $2,500,000 to $4,999,999 ................................: 373 87 138 116 32 $5,000,000 or more ......................................: 350 92 111 105 42 : Total sales ............................................farms: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 $1,000: 10,892,201 2,794,603 3,989,720 2,944,410 1,163,468 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas ............farms: 3,530 1,186 1,547 673 124 $1,000: 1,626,831 420,600 595,302 462,997 147,931 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,497 859 1,014 531 93 $1,000: 1,607,176 414,425 585,656 459,885 147,211 Corn ...............................................farms: 1,117 359 484 215 59 $1,000: 405,868 99,958 144,117 117,098 44,696 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 788 250 326 163 49 $1,000: 398,382 97,569 140,889 115,595 44,329 Wheat ..............................................farms: 2,203 748 945 432 78 $1,000: 744,115 193,830 278,653 214,086 57,546 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 1,538 508 626 350 54 $1,000: 730,200 188,747 271,836 212,491 57,126 Soybeans ...........................................farms: 8 4 4 - - $1,000: 135 (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Sorghum ............................................farms: 6 5 1 - - $1,000: 337 (D) (D) - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 1 1 - - $1,000: (D) (D) (D) - - Barley .............................................farms: 1,319 458 554 256 51 $1,000: 349,414 89,344 125,616 96,690 37,763 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 838 305 321 174 38 $1,000: 341,143 86,631 121,630 95,387 37,495 Rice ...............................................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas ..........................................farms: 771 274 303 174 20 $1,000: 126,961 37,181 46,731 35,123 7,926 Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 479 158 188 123 10 $1,000: 121,065 34,578 44,705 34,040 7,742 Tobacco ..............................................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed ................................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes ............................................farms: 1,231 331 612 238 50 $1,000: 1,597,035 307,798 495,602 488,950 304,685 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 679 203 260 174 42 $1,000: 1,591,765 306,197 492,645 488,304 304,619 : Fruits, tree nuts, and berries .......................farms: 561 119 373 54 15 $1,000: 31,693 21,465 6,776 3,041 410 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 38 13 16 8 1 $1,000: 27,916 (D) 4,304 2,779 (D) Fruits and tree nuts ...............................farms: 446 98 292 43 13 $1,000: 29,683 (D) 5,298 2,840 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 29 11 11 6 1 $1,000: 26,766 (D) 3,457 (D) (D) Berries ............................................farms: 234 44 169 16 5 $1,000: 2,010 (D) 1,479 201 (D) Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 7 1 5 1 - $1,000: 943 (D) (D) (D) - Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod ...........farms: 599 170 307 92 30 $1,000: 122,254 29,558 27,257 40,591 24,848 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 183 42 74 48 19 $1,000: 117,897 28,178 24,908 40,064 24,747 Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops .........................................farms: 47 6 33 8 - $1,000: 673 (D) 248 (D) - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD AND GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS - Con. : : Total - Con. : Total sales - Con. : Cultivated Christmas trees and short rotation : woody crops - Con. : : Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2 - 1 1 - $1,000: (D) - (D) (D) - Cultivated Christmas trees .........................farms: 47 6 33 8 - $1,000: 673 (D) 248 (D) - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: 2 - 1 1 - $1,000: (D) - (D) (D) - Short rotation woody crops .........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Other crops and hay ..................................farms: 7,813 2,556 4,155 935 167 $1,000: 1,386,308 365,609 532,896 352,663 135,140 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,501 851 1,051 504 95 $1,000: 1,335,712 349,208 505,834 346,447 134,223 Maple syrup ........................................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - Sales of $50,000 or more .........................farms: - - - - - $1,000: - - - - - : Cattle and calves ....................................farms: 7,630 2,146 4,394 931 159 $1,000: 2,175,548 507,889 783,882 693,395 190,382 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 2,047 574 993 408 72 $1,000: 2,114,032 489,828 748,774 686,254 189,175 Milk from cows .......................................farms: 330 79 134 99 18 $1,000: 3,727,378 1,026,053 1,465,112 883,325 352,888 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 295 69 112 96 18 $1,000: 3,727,100 1,025,983 1,464,953 883,276 352,888 Hogs and pigs ........................................farms: 663 82 503 59 19 $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) 266 215 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 18 2 12 1 3 $1,000: 22,239 (D) (D) (D) 184 Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and milk .................farms: 1,454 326 977 127 24 $1,000: 46,709 24,730 (D) (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 50 22 24 3 1 $1,000: 40,891 23,454 14,486 (D) (D) Horses, ponies, mules, burros, : and donkeys .........................................farms: 1,028 205 673 115 35 $1,000: 12,951 (D) 7,357 (D) 376 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 54 13 33 8 - $1,000: 4,770 (D) 2,365 (D) - Poultry and eggs .....................................farms: 1,751 306 1,262 150 33 $1,000: 40,298 34,730 5,140 224 205 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 15 6 6 - 3 $1,000: 37,584 34,211 3,203 - 170 Aquaculture ..........................................farms: 51 20 17 12 2 $1,000: 76,464 25,817 37,539 (D) (D) Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 39 17 10 10 2 $1,000: 76,279 (D) 37,511 11,348 (D) Other animals and other animal : products ............................................farms: 585 140 343 81 21 $1,000: 24,281 7,108 11,409 3,419 2,345 Sales of $50,000 or more ...........................farms: 65 20 33 9 3 $1,000: 22,371 6,639 10,315 3,263 2,154 : Value of- : Government payments ....................................farms: 4,296 1,394 1,969 732 201 $1,000: 132,405 38,652 53,082 30,391 10,281 : Landlord's share of total sales ........................farms: 719 255 316 125 23 $1,000: 99,099 28,833 38,374 27,705 4,186 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to- : Consumers ..............................................farms: 1,499 278 1,022 167 32 $1,000: 20,984 3,273 9,897 6,769 1,046 : Retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for : local or regionally branded products ..................farms: 638 178 350 99 11 $1,000: 57,669 10,215 20,481 26,452 521 : FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES : : Total farm production expenses 1/ ........................farms: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 $1,000: 9,317,904 2,365,656 3,476,291 2,497,825 978,132 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 407,304 339,991 270,739 986,892 1,784,913 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased .............................................farms: 9,896 2,886 5,373 1,361 276 $1,000: 765,559 181,190 269,238 228,630 86,502 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 5,657 1,482 3,539 517 119 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,673 567 790 272 44 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 636 232 292 89 23 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,930 605 752 483 90 : Chemicals purchased ....................................farms: 10,419 2,914 5,798 1,399 308 $1,000: 410,258 85,250 151,097 122,326 51,585 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,344 1,922 4,532 722 168 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,444 502 634 251 57 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Chemicals purchased - Con. : Farms with expenses of- - Con. : : $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 523 155 218 136 14 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,108 335 414 290 69 : Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased ..............farms: 7,732 2,282 4,062 1,161 227 $1,000: 378,944 90,015 135,388 104,810 48,731 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 2,522 653 1,622 213 34 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,881 537 1,025 262 57 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,602 574 720 275 33 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 515 175 226 95 19 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,212 343 469 316 84 : Cover crop seed purchased ............................farms: 1,065 254 581 175 55 $1,000: 4,094 878 1,697 862 658 : Livestock and poultry purchased or leased ..............farms: 6,503 1,533 4,072 760 138 $1,000: 722,700 153,865 279,787 223,686 65,362 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 4,196 936 2,815 376 69 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,502 387 854 223 38 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 476 138 238 84 16 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 140 27 77 25 11 $250,000 or more ........................................: 189 45 88 52 4 : Breeding livestock purchased or leased ...............farms: 3,243 788 1,918 450 87 $1,000: 121,882 41,657 (D) 18,566 (D) Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ..............................................farms: 4,301 933 2,846 443 79 $1,000: 600,818 112,208 (D) 205,120 (D) : Feed purchased .........................................farms: 13,525 3,648 8,247 1,373 257 $1,000: 2,598,813 707,260 972,630 672,714 246,208 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 8,387 2,324 5,274 670 119 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,621 901 2,220 409 91 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 912 270 491 142 9 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 207 48 105 42 12 $250,000 or more ........................................: 398 105 157 110 26 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ....................farms: 21,557 6,443 12,233 2,390 491 $1,000: 395,457 107,579 146,297 99,810 41,772 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 15,681 4,613 9,463 1,311 294 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 3,613 1,194 1,837 506 76 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 862 244 423 171 24 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,401 392 510 402 97 : Utilities ..............................................farms: 15,852 4,716 8,814 1,961 361 $1,000: 357,174 97,207 130,527 91,953 37,487 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 4,788 1,400 2,947 367 74 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 6,414 1,894 3,758 661 101 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,982 947 1,461 489 85 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 605 201 263 125 16 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,063 274 385 319 85 : Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ...............farms: 18,678 5,579 10,479 2,185 435 $1,000: 632,154 158,529 249,411 165,537 58,677 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 11,397 3,339 6,916 941 201 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 4,430 1,378 2,417 546 89 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,046 355 455 193 43 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,805 507 691 505 102 : Hired farm labor .......................................farms: 5,697 1,709 2,688 1,051 249 $1,000: 1,043,118 259,715 390,674 273,972 118,757 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 1,583 470 917 156 40 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,302 392 652 221 37 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,427 467 613 277 70 $100,000 to $249,999 ....................................: 639 187 246 176 30 $250,000 or more ........................................: 746 193 260 221 72 : Contract labor .........................................farms: 2,547 778 1,255 408 106 $1,000: 101,956 30,178 34,938 30,690 6,149 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 452 129 275 34 14 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 752 234 397 96 25 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 753 248 351 133 21 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 256 67 115 54 20 $50,000 or more .........................................: 334 100 117 91 26 : Customwork and custom hauling ..........................farms: 5,857 1,758 3,166 790 143 $1,000: 247,148 78,820 87,856 59,844 20,627 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 1,290 324 857 75 34 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,893 562 1,158 156 17 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,497 492 707 266 32 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 401 157 152 85 7 $50,000 or more .........................................: 776 223 292 208 53 : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees ..................................................farms: 5,471 1,761 2,594 936 180 $1,000: 550,451 111,823 192,363 159,442 86,823 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARM PRODUCTION EXPENSES - Con. : : Total farm production expenses 1/ - Con. : Cash rent for land, buildings, and grazing : fees - Con. : : Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,036 660 1,075 244 57 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 590 188 286 104 12 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 871 312 418 129 12 $25,000 or more .........................................: 1,974 601 815 459 99 : Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, : and farm share of vehicles ............................farms: 1,821 530 864 347 80 $1,000: 80,056 19,738 26,232 23,124 10,962 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ..............................................: 408 121 223 59 5 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 436 136 225 66 9 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 516 163 224 106 23 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 151 28 81 24 18 $50,000 or more .........................................: 310 82 111 92 25 : Interest expense .......................................farms: 6,805 1,988 3,655 965 197 $1,000: 286,045 75,595 109,984 67,530 32,936 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 2,537 814 1,426 250 47 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,688 738 1,577 321 52 $25,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 1,113 329 490 239 55 $100,000 or more ........................................: 467 107 162 155 43 : Secured by real estate ...............................farms: 4,788 1,319 2,643 682 144 $1,000: 188,811 50,992 79,606 42,382 15,831 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 429 118 234 60 17 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,138 351 669 105 13 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 2,184 557 1,307 276 44 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 452 138 195 87 32 $50,000 or more .......................................: 585 155 238 154 38 : Not secured by real estate ...........................farms: 4,230 1,282 2,211 629 108 $1,000: 97,234 24,603 30,378 25,148 17,105 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $999 ............................................: 780 226 465 80 9 $1,000 to $4,999 ......................................: 1,752 579 958 180 35 $5,000 to $24,999 .....................................: 1,098 315 567 192 24 $25,000 to $49,999 ....................................: 288 84 127 67 10 $50,000 or more .......................................: 312 78 94 110 30 : Property taxes paid ....................................farms: 21,486 6,415 12,196 2,349 526 $1,000: 128,588 36,773 61,491 22,778 7,546 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 17,581 5,273 10,399 1,568 341 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,036 585 1,019 358 74 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,125 347 486 242 50 $25,000 or more .........................................: 744 210 292 181 61 : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services : for livestock .........................................farms: 9,388 2,460 5,618 1,119 191 $1,000: 172,113 50,097 65,513 42,668 13,835 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,856 2,059 4,898 775 124 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 1,128 305 567 215 41 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 143 39 59 40 5 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 91 12 37 37 5 $100,000 or more ........................................: 170 45 57 52 16 : All other production expenses ..........................farms: 12,433 3,656 6,729 1,701 347 $1,000: 447,370 122,022 172,865 108,310 44,174 Farms with expenses of- : $1 to $4,999 ............................................: 7,586 2,173 4,533 719 161 $5,000 to $24,999 .......................................: 2,987 964 1,450 484 89 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 634 182 282 148 22 $50,000 to $99,999 ......................................: 642 182 264 182 14 $100,000 or more ........................................: 584 155 200 168 61 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ .................farms: 867 298 370 182 17 $1,000: 36,781 11,804 14,641 9,221 1,115 : Depreciation expenses claimed ............................farms: 15,202 4,540 8,341 1,927 394 $1,000: 892,639 234,615 341,316 236,969 79,740 : NET CASH FARM INCOME : : Net cash farm income of operations .......................farms: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 $1,000: 2,034,090 551,130 695,440 562,252 225,267 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 88,914 79,208 54,162 222,146 411,072 : Farms with net gains 2/ ...............................number: 8,958 2,887 4,492 1,282 297 Average net gain .................................dollars: 275,011 232,857 199,671 511,788 802,224 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 625 227 345 49 4 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,519 501 852 112 54 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 841 272 463 92 14 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,326 391 724 153 58 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,020 342 534 130 14 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,627 1,154 1,574 746 153 : Farms with net losses .................................number: 13,919 4,071 8,348 1,249 251 Average net loss .................................dollars: 30,854 29,754 24,135 75,148 51,766 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NET CASH FARM INCOME - Con. : : Net cash farm income of operations - Con. : Farms with net losses - Con. : : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 848 279 504 58 7 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,810 1,219 2,293 245 53 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,928 865 1,807 208 48 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,582 934 2,274 325 49 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,445 388 875 153 29 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,306 386 595 260 65 : Net cash farm income of producers ........................farms: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 $1,000: 1,897,116 529,925 644,606 505,198 217,387 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 82,927 76,161 50,203 199,604 396,691 : Producers reporting net gains 2/ .......................farms: 8,919 2,873 4,476 1,273 297 Average net gain .................................dollars: 263,468 228,236 189,860 482,326 775,526 : Gain of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 636 225 356 51 4 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 1,511 509 844 110 48 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 846 271 470 85 20 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 1,342 401 722 161 58 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 994 331 525 122 16 $50,000 or more .........................................: 3,590 1,136 1,559 744 151 : Producers reporting net losses .........................farms: 13,958 4,085 8,364 1,258 251 Average net loss .................................dollars: 32,437 30,795 24,535 86,489 51,571 : Loss of- : Less than $1,000 ........................................: 843 281 498 57 7 $1,000 to $4,999 ........................................: 3,827 1,223 2,308 243 53 $5,000 to $9,999 ........................................: 2,922 867 1,798 209 48 $10,000 to $24,999 ......................................: 3,574 929 2,269 326 50 $25,000 to $49,999 ......................................: 1,453 385 883 157 28 $50,000 or more .........................................: 1,339 400 608 266 65 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ....................................................farms: 39 11 19 6 3 $1,000: 5,255 1,509 2,412 (D) (D) : INCOME FROM FARM-RELATED SOURCES : : Total income from farm-related sources ...................farms: 7,733 2,336 4,017 1,121 259 $1,000: 327,387 83,531 128,929 85,277 29,650 : Customwork and other agricultural services .............farms: 1,707 491 898 272 46 $1,000: 65,446 16,626 23,203 21,070 4,548 : Gross cash rent or share payments ......................farms: 3,629 1,168 1,821 508 132 $1,000: 116,760 38,341 44,905 27,172 6,342 Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas trees, : short rotation woody crops, and maple products ........farms: 426 100 228 68 30 $1,000: 10,515 1,435 4,234 1,801 3,045 Agri-tourism and recreational services .................farms: 200 43 106 32 19 $1,000: 16,909 973 11,192 1,111 3,632 Patronage dividends and refunds from : cooperatives ..........................................farms: 2,432 735 1,168 445 84 $1,000: 27,917 4,363 12,013 8,729 2,812 Crop and livestock insurance payments ..................farms: 966 266 489 171 40 $1,000: 51,896 13,993 16,023 17,242 4,639 Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments .........................farms: 129 35 71 13 10 $1,000: 982 309 549 58 66 Other farm-related income sources ......................farms: 870 209 494 135 32 $1,000: 36,961 7,492 16,810 8,093 4,566 : LAND USE : : Total cropland ...........................................farms: 15,823 4,934 8,477 1,962 450 acres: 5,623,516 1,530,455 2,162,966 1,481,768 448,327 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 13,037 3,988 7,130 1,610 309 acres: 4,370,363 1,179,548 1,673,156 1,144,541 373,118 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 49 acres ...........................................: 7,454 2,202 4,595 533 124 50 to 99 acres ..........................................: 1,154 371 593 157 33 100 to 199 acres ........................................: 1,197 398 570 194 35 200 to 499 acres ........................................: 1,342 475 612 231 24 500 to 999 acres ........................................: 826 247 358 194 27 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................: 519 146 204 152 17 2,000 acres or more .....................................: 545 149 198 149 49 : Cropland- : Other pasture and grazing land that could have been : used for crops without additional : improvements ........................................farms: 1,737 477 959 258 43 acres: 214,761 60,588 102,522 47,559 4,092 On which all crops failed or were abandoned ..........farms: 983 254 529 166 34 acres: 59,462 16,433 25,354 14,610 3,065 Idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, : but not harvested and not pastured or grazed ........farms: 3,822 1,225 1,866 561 170 acres: 660,805 172,160 226,018 212,171 50,456 In summer fallow .....................................farms: 1,696 539 840 263 54 acres: 318,125 101,726 135,916 62,887 17,596 : Total woodland ...........................................farms: 3,406 897 1,972 438 99 acres: 479,705 116,032 192,340 128,148 43,185 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND USE - Con. : : Total woodland - Con. : : Woodland pastured ......................................farms: 1,561 382 922 206 51 acres: 250,428 51,409 84,801 88,155 26,063 Woodland not pastured ..................................farms: 2,265 595 1,293 303 74 acres: 229,277 64,623 107,539 39,993 17,122 Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured ..........................farms: 12,204 3,465 7,274 1,208 257 acres: 5,012,618 1,383,666 2,309,834 1,130,636 188,482 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, ponds, roads, wasteland, etc. ...............farms: 13,192 3,508 7,906 1,460 318 acres: 432,124 112,198 197,666 91,821 30,439 : Irrigated land ...........................................farms: 14,191 4,148 8,075 1,618 350 acres: 3,167,499 801,661 1,179,544 858,898 327,396 Harvested cropland .....................................farms: 10,389 3,142 5,665 1,304 278 acres: 2,904,105 735,564 1,045,096 809,450 313,995 Pastureland and other land .............................farms: 6,620 1,733 4,060 680 147 acres: 263,394 66,097 134,448 49,448 13,401 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation Reserve : Enhancement Programs ....................................farms: 1,681 577 704 285 115 acres: 423,658 103,415 140,379 143,991 35,873 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs .................farms: 2,599 815 1,130 559 95 acres: 2,933,445 778,122 1,097,145 794,870 263,308 : ORGANIC AGRICULTURE : : Total organic product sales ..............................farms: 227 65 100 50 12 $1,000: 166,224 42,031 87,582 30,590 6,021 : VALUE OF LAND AND BUILDINGS : : Estimated market value of land and buildings .............farms: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 $1,000: 48,610,483 13,274,365 21,375,676 10,556,308 3,404,133 Average per farm ...................................dollars: 2,124,863 1,907,785 1,664,772 4,170,805 6,211,922 Average per acre ...................................dollars: 4,209 4,224 4,396 3,727 4,792 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 .............................................: 1,300 466 745 81 8 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 1,091 395 571 94 31 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 1,951 669 1,083 166 33 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 5,883 1,770 3,602 431 80 $500,000 to $999,999 ......................................: 5,555 1,575 3,360 484 136 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ..................................: 2,930 822 1,624 402 82 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ..................................: 2,186 668 1,042 418 58 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ..................................: 969 297 425 209 38 $10,000,000 or more .......................................: 1,012 296 388 246 82 : VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................farms: 22,877 6,958 12,840 2,531 548 $1,000: 4,930,153 1,344,124 2,073,196 1,161,675 351,157 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $4,999 ..............................................: 1,609 548 922 109 30 $5,000 to $9,999 ..........................................: 1,735 562 983 160 30 $10,000 to $19,999 ........................................: 2,733 941 1,572 183 37 $20,000 to $49,999 ........................................: 5,105 1,565 3,023 401 116 $50,000 to $99,999 ........................................: 4,134 1,155 2,494 390 95 $100,000 to $199,999 ......................................: 3,057 860 1,743 366 88 $200,000 to $499,999 ......................................: 2,429 698 1,309 382 40 $500,000 or more ..........................................: 2,075 629 794 540 112 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ................................farms: 18,416 5,291 10,584 2,138 403 number: 54,948 14,778 26,446 10,710 3,014 : Tractors, all ............................................farms: 16,968 4,944 9,646 1,974 404 number: 42,226 12,258 20,964 7,278 1,726 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) ..........................farms: 7,400 2,018 4,467 750 165 number: 9,283 2,554 5,464 1,019 246 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) ..............................farms: 9,749 2,813 5,440 1,219 277 number: 14,421 4,315 7,564 2,097 445 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ...........................farms: 6,684 2,135 3,187 1,154 208 number: 18,522 5,389 7,936 4,162 1,035 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled ..................farms: 2,292 744 981 487 80 number: 3,237 1,021 1,338 738 140 Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled .............farms: - - - - - number: - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled ........................farms: 2,307 658 1,172 401 76 number: 2,680 732 1,315 528 105 Hay balers ...............................................farms: 6,213 1,867 3,270 916 160 number: 7,569 2,243 3,949 1,177 200 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FERTILIZERS AND CHEMICALS : : Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : used ....................................................farms: 8,673 2,559 4,615 1,233 266 acres treated: 3,496,612 908,806 1,299,537 972,179 316,090 Manure used ..............................................farms: 3,432 811 2,004 505 112 acres treated: 331,595 54,988 123,795 111,415 41,397 Organic fertilizer used ..................................farms: 497 134 266 72 25 acres treated: 55,232 11,030 22,196 19,791 2,215 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ................................................farms: 2,975 839 1,452 561 123 acres: 1,304,919 256,148 451,760 415,761 181,250 Weeds, grass, or brush .................................farms: 8,233 2,344 4,462 1,168 259 acres: 3,216,414 795,405 1,225,566 899,415 296,028 Nematodes ..............................................farms: 714 200 320 152 42 acres: 311,847 58,246 101,066 88,676 63,859 Diseases in crops and orchards .........................farms: 1,321 378 596 269 78 acres: 759,333 152,683 254,182 247,317 105,151 Chemicals used to control growth, : thin fruit, ripen, or defoliate .........................farms: 877 254 378 193 52 acres on which used: 305,558 71,458 102,371 87,735 43,994 : LAND USE PRACTICES : : Land drained by tile .....................................farms: 405 118 220 59 8 acres: 74,786 17,985 34,599 17,595 4,607 Land artificially drained by ditches .....................farms: 2,229 673 1,284 218 54 acres: 217,276 64,906 90,621 53,009 8,740 Land under conservation easement .........................farms: 427 111 204 83 29 acres: 166,621 24,467 69,680 58,226 14,248 Cropland on which no-till practices were used ............farms: 1,798 507 925 293 73 acres: 641,103 179,326 239,441 158,549 63,787 Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were used (see text) .......farms: 2,102 644 1,000 365 93 acres: 983,544 281,641 335,733 303,590 62,580 Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) ..........................farms: 4,226 1,305 2,030 750 141 acres: 1,842,044 456,431 720,201 469,491 195,921 Cropland planted to a cover crop (excluding CRP) .........farms: 1,326 322 690 246 68 acres: 127,777 30,731 48,078 35,763 13,205 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ........farms: 2,717 796 1,236 566 119 : RENEWABLE ENERGY : : Renewable energy producing systems (see text) ............farms: 1,682 364 1,046 219 53 Solar panels ...........................................farms: 1,427 303 895 196 33 Wind turbines ..........................................farms: 99 22 51 14 12 Methane digesters ......................................farms: 10 1 4 4 1 Geothermal/geoexchange systems .........................farms: 191 47 126 16 2 Small hydro systems ....................................farms: 82 17 36 13 16 : Wind rights leased to others .............................farms: 83 30 38 10 5 : TENURE : : Full owners ..............................................farms: 17,125 5,129 10,025 1,600 371 Part owners ..............................................farms: 4,463 1,312 2,269 737 145 Tenants ..................................................farms: 1,289 517 546 194 32 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND : : Land owned ...............................................farms: 21,665 6,481 12,322 2,346 516 acres: 8,813,519 2,551,927 3,617,487 2,189,173 454,932 Owned land in farms ....................................farms: 21,588 6,441 12,294 2,337 516 acres: 7,737,908 2,133,894 3,186,578 1,987,949 429,487 : Land rented or leased from others ........................farms: 5,829 1,864 2,848 940 177 acres: 3,852,080 1,015,343 1,694,358 853,986 288,393 Rented or leased land in farms .........................farms: 5,752 1,829 2,815 931 177 acres: 3,810,055 1,008,457 1,676,228 844,424 280,946 : Land rented or leased to others ..........................farms: 3,262 1,083 1,621 455 103 acres: 1,117,636 424,919 449,039 210,786 32,892 : TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS : : Total producers ...............................................: 44,714 6,958 25,680 8,503 3,573 Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer ................................................: 6,958 6,958 - - - 2 producers ...............................................: 12,840 - 12,840 - - 3 producers ...............................................: 1,621 - - 1,621 - 4 producers ...............................................: 910 - - 910 - 5 or more producers .......................................: 548 - - - 548 : Total male producers ........................................: 27,035 5,637 13,691 5,542 2,165 Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 17,639 5,637 11,663 323 16 2 producers .............................................: 2,533 - 1,014 1,437 82 3 producers .............................................: 838 - - 671 167 4 producers .............................................: 193 - - 83 110 5 or more producers .....................................: 173 - - - 173 : Total female producers ......................................: 17,679 1,321 11,989 2,961 1,408 Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ..............................................: 14,310 1,321 11,663 1,254 72 2 producers .............................................: 1,105 - 163 779 163 3 producers .............................................: 163 - - 43 120 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL PRODUCERS AND FARMS BY NUMBER OF : PRODUCERS - Con. : : Total producers - Con. : Total female producers - Con. : Farms by number of female producers: - Con. : : 4 producers .............................................: 83 - - 5 78 5 or more producers .....................................: 58 - - - 58 : PRODUCERS' CHARACTERISTICS 3/ : : Sex of producers: : Male .......................................................: 26,384 5,637 13,691 5,542 1,514 Female ......................................................: 16,949 1,321 11,989 2,961 678 : Hired managers ................................................: 3,382 304 1,028 1,529 521 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................: 17,793 3,391 9,535 3,956 911 Other .......................................................: 25,540 3,567 16,145 4,547 1,281 : Place of residence: : On farm operated ............................................: 33,141 5,444 21,414 5,347 936 Not on farm operated ........................................: 10,192 1,514 4,266 3,156 1,256 : Days of work off farm: : None ........................................................: 16,151 3,039 9,089 3,240 783 Any .........................................................: 27,182 3,919 16,591 5,263 1,409 1 to 49 days ..............................................: 4,566 755 2,722 837 252 50 to 99 days .............................................: 2,032 321 1,179 431 101 100 to 199 days ...........................................: 3,482 511 2,208 586 177 200 days or more ..........................................: 17,102 2,332 10,482 3,409 879 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less .............................................: 2,561 302 1,412 638 209 3 or 4 years ................................................: 4,392 533 2,737 914 208 5 to 9 years ................................................: 9,426 1,248 5,919 1,794 465 10 years or more ............................................: 26,954 4,875 15,612 5,157 1,310 : Average years on present farm ...............................: 19.0 22.7 18.3 18.6 17.8 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less .............................................: 7,099 799 4,261 1,651 388 6 to 10 years ...............................................: 7,699 931 4,963 1,337 468 11 years or more ............................................: 28,535 5,228 16,456 5,515 1,336 : Average years on any farm ...................................: 21.7 25.8 20.8 21.4 20.5 : Age group: : Under 25 years ..............................................: 832 35 139 497 161 25 to 34 years ..............................................: 3,027 318 1,525 990 194 35 to 44 years ..............................................: 6,911 694 4,484 1,421 312 45 to 54 years ..............................................: 7,320 987 4,564 1,367 402 55 to 64 years ..............................................: 10,123 1,607 6,226 1,835 455 65 to 74 years ..............................................: 10,095 1,988 6,152 1,525 430 75 years and over ...........................................: 5,025 1,329 2,590 868 238 : Average age .................................................: 56.6 61.6 56.8 52.7 53.5 : Young producers (see text) ....................................: 3,859 353 1,664 1,487 355 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ..............: 1,341 264 752 265 60 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native ............................: 290 67 141 72 10 Asian .......................................................: 144 13 70 49 12 Black or African American ...................................: 19 - 11 8 - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ...................: 42 5 29 8 - White .......................................................: 42,509 6,807 25,245 8,296 2,161 More than one race reported .................................: 329 66 184 70 9 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training in : the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..................: 39,671 6,160 23,484 7,981 2,046 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...................: 3,662 798 2,196 522 146 : Number of persons living in producers' : households ...................................................: 86,167 16,730 45,680 18,749 5,008 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions ........................................: 37,172 6,632 22,615 6,398 1,527 Land use and/or crop decisions ..............................: 32,598 5,891 19,619 5,737 1,351 Livestock decisions .........................................: 26,379 4,444 16,613 4,402 920 Marketing decisions (see text) ..............................: 25,823 4,752 15,547 4,494 1,030 Record keeping and/or financial management ..................: 30,863 5,773 18,814 5,037 1,239 Estate planning or succession planning ......................: 23,727 4,108 14,462 4,163 994 : FARMS BY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's : household and/or extended family ........................farms: 21,570 6,638 12,300 2,222 410 acres: 9,774,644 2,714,592 4,252,605 2,285,359 522,088 Limited Liability Company ................................farms: 3,390 753 1,863 634 140 acres: 2,655,263 545,212 1,185,455 665,752 258,844 : LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ....................................farms: 18,427 5,995 10,782 1,415 235 acres: 4,611,219 1,704,126 2,206,332 629,196 71,565 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES - Con. : : Partnership ..............................................farms: 1,752 288 829 513 122 acres: 2,798,624 393,639 1,138,823 919,878 346,284 Registered under State law .............................farms: 1,562 240 754 456 112 acres: 2,678,784 357,276 1,088,089 890,139 343,280 : Corporation ..............................................farms: 2,145 505 984 516 140 acres: 3,033,242 850,712 1,084,814 902,156 195,560 Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 426 903 455 99 acres: 2,758,073 795,945 1,013,215 776,684 172,229 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 35 9 3 17 6 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 1,848 417 900 438 93 : Other than family held .................................farms: 262 79 81 61 41 acres: 275,169 54,767 71,599 125,472 23,331 More than 10 stockholders ............................farms: 32 16 1 1 14 10 or less stockholders ..............................farms: 230 63 80 60 27 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. .......................farms: 553 170 245 87 51 acres: 1,104,878 193,874 432,837 381,143 97,024 : HIRED FARM LABOR : : Hired farm labor .........................................farms: 5,697 1,709 2,688 1,051 249 workers: 42,990 11,144 15,577 11,534 4,735 Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more .....................................farms: 3,478 994 1,480 783 221 workers: 21,741 5,360 7,639 5,977 2,765 Less than 150 days ...................................farms: 3,988 1,169 1,945 722 152 workers: 21,249 5,784 7,938 5,557 1,970 Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor .............farms: 714 226 241 178 69 Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor ..........................................farms: 32 15 4 13 - Unpaid workers ...........................................farms: 8,421 1,810 5,309 1,040 262 workers: 21,358 3,598 13,228 3,373 1,159 : FARMS BY SIZE : : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................: 5,785 1,642 3,730 333 80 10 to 49 acres ................................................: 6,977 2,063 4,271 536 107 50 to 69 acres ................................................: 881 314 458 91 18 70 to 99 acres ................................................: 1,133 408 591 102 32 100 to 139 acres ..............................................: 960 299 510 132 19 140 to 179 acres ..............................................: 927 279 490 126 32 180 to 219 acres ..............................................: 517 196 261 54 6 220 to 259 acres ..............................................: 432 159 225 38 10 260 to 499 acres ..............................................: 1,566 504 702 297 63 500 to 999 acres ..............................................: 1,384 445 604 275 60 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................: 1,048 295 487 235 31 2,000 acres or more ...........................................: 1,267 354 511 312 90 : FARMS BY NORTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY : CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM (NAICS) : : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ..............................: 1,681 616 737 287 41 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) ............................: 767 200 406 133 28 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) .............................: 401 82 267 39 13 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114) .......: 555 153 282 90 30 Other crop farming (1119) .....................................: 7,395 2,564 3,780 846 205 Tobacco farming (11191) .....................................: - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) ......................................: - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) .........................: 7,395 2,564 3,780 846 205 Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) .....................: 6,883 2,038 4,102 633 110 Cattle feedlots (112112) ......................................: 132 48 62 19 3 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) ......................: 334 83 141 93 17 Hog and pig farming (1122) ....................................: 179 28 135 10 6 Poultry and egg production (1123) .............................: 601 116 431 42 12 Sheep and goat farming (1124) .................................: 1,092 296 697 92 7 Aquaculture and other animal production (1125,1129) ...........: 2,857 734 1,800 247 76 : FARM TYPOLOGY (SEE TEXT) : : Farms by typology group: : Small family farms : Gross cash farm income less than $150,000 .................: 17,963 5,465 10,713 1,490 295 Gross cash farm income $150,000 to $349,999 ...............: 1,235 438 598 175 24 Midsize family farms : Gross cash farm income $350,000 to $999,999 ...............: 1,207 404 570 222 11 Large family farms : Gross cash farm income $1,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...........: 875 249 325 255 46 Gross cash farm income $5,000,000 or more .................: 290 82 94 80 34 Non-family farms ............................................: 1,307 320 540 309 138 : OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS : : Farms reporting- : Internet access .............................................: 19,417 5,464 11,272 2,217 464 Dial-up ...................................................: 537 179 302 49 7 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) ............: 10,022 2,600 5,932 1,209 281 Cellular data plan (see text) .............................: 12,438 3,376 7,252 1,485 325 Satellite .................................................: 5,457 1,458 3,306 585 108 Don't know ................................................: 905 407 394 92 12 Other .....................................................: 304 72 178 45 9 : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: : 1 household .................................................: 18,831 6,310 10,952 1,296 273 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FARM CHARACTERISTICS - Con. : : Farms by number of households sharing in net income : of operation: - Con. : : 2 households ................................................: 2,888 476 1,664 670 78 3 households ................................................: 661 90 115 382 74 4 households ................................................: 291 57 81 129 24 5 or more households ........................................: 206 25 28 54 99 : LIVESTOCK : : Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 8,956 2,584 5,149 1,024 199 number: 2,517,987 685,082 1,009,607 643,965 179,333 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ....................................................: 3,651 1,013 2,360 223 55 10 to 49 ..................................................: 2,769 876 1,524 308 61 50 to 99 ..................................................: 770 220 421 115 14 100 to 199 ................................................: 606 169 335 88 14 200 to 499 ................................................: 607 171 281 136 19 500 or more ...............................................: 553 135 228 154 36 : Cows and heifers that calved ...........................farms: 7,712 2,229 4,385 916 182 number: 1,113,728 307,252 481,492 251,081 73,903 : Beef cows ............................................farms: 7,379 2,149 4,227 835 168 number: 449,249 126,259 214,370 90,366 18,254 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 3,402 974 2,124 246 58 10 to 49 ..............................................: 2,343 719 1,283 286 55 50 to 99 ..............................................: 581 178 309 79 15 100 to 199 ............................................: 517 143 246 114 14 200 to 499 ............................................: 375 94 198 71 12 500 or more ...........................................: 161 41 67 39 14 : Milk cows ............................................farms: 549 125 288 117 19 number: 664,479 180,993 267,122 160,715 55,649 Farms with- : 1 to 9 ................................................: 259 59 176 21 3 10 to 49 ..............................................: 21 5 10 6 - 50 to 99 ..............................................: 17 4 7 5 1 100 to 199 ............................................: 27 6 17 4 - 200 to 499 ............................................: 58 12 20 23 3 500 or more ...........................................: 167 39 58 58 12 : Other cattle ...........................................farms: 6,745 1,901 3,822 865 157 number: 1,404,259 377,830 528,115 392,884 105,430 : Cattle and calves sold ...................................farms: 7,630 2,146 4,394 931 159 number: 1,835,062 516,585 664,481 518,024 135,972 $1,000: 2,175,548 507,889 783,882 693,395 190,382 Calves weighing less than 500 pounds ...................farms: 2,533 687 1,415 364 67 number: 485,342 220,788 129,927 118,216 16,411 Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more .....................farms: 7,198 2,019 4,127 900 152 number: 1,349,720 295,797 534,554 399,808 119,561 Cattle on feed .......................................farms: 228 68 92 53 15 number: 492,887 29,671 177,507 222,398 63,311 : Hogs and pigs inventory ..................................farms: 562 92 418 33 19 number: 21,157 (D) 7,954 (D) 710 Farms with- : 1 to 24 ...................................................: 517 79 394 28 16 25 to 49 ..................................................: 20 8 8 4 - 50 to 99 ..................................................: 5 3 2 - - 100 to 199 ................................................: 6 - 6 - - 200 to 499 ................................................: 9 - 5 1 3 500 or more ...............................................: 5 2 3 - - : Hogs and pigs sold .......................................farms: 663 82 503 59 19 number: 100,260 (D) 17,558 (D) 767 $1,000: 23,779 (D) (D) 266 215 : Sheep and lambs inventory ................................farms: 1,208 311 767 113 17 number: 230,681 119,531 85,354 (D) (D) Sheep and lambs sold .....................................farms: 840 203 551 75 11 number: 198,506 108,812 73,826 (D) (D) : Total horses and ponies inventory ........................farms: 6,660 1,648 4,205 668 139 number: 41,412 9,436 24,294 6,350 1,332 Total horses and ponies sold .............................farms: 989 192 647 115 35 number: 3,200 645 1,732 749 74 : Goats, all inventory .....................................farms: 1,474 329 997 122 26 number: 24,780 7,223 15,742 1,405 410 Goats, all sold ..........................................farms: 702 134 498 57 13 number: 11,265 2,483 7,870 778 134 : POULTRY : : Layers inventory .........................................farms: 3,514 611 2,507 330 66 number: 638,424 562,473 61,483 6,270 8,198 Farms with- : 1 to 399 ..................................................: 3,500 604 2,503 330 63 400 to 3,199 ..............................................: 9 3 3 - 3 3,200 to 9,999 ............................................: - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999 ..........................................: 1 - 1 - - 20,000 to 49,999 ..........................................: 2 2 - - - 50,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: 2 2 - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POULTRY - Con. : : Pullets for laying flock replacement inventory ...........farms: 447 73 316 50 8 number: (D) (D) 4,720 722 50 : Layers sold ..............................................farms: 358 63 264 23 8 number: (D) (D) 8,992 238 6,130 : Pullets for laying flock replacement sold ................farms: 43 11 30 - 2 number: (D) (D) 1,364 - (D) : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ...............farms: 155 40 105 10 - number: 11,815 1,305 10,090 420 - Farms with- : 1 to 1,999 ................................................: 155 40 105 10 - 2,000 to 59,999 ...........................................: - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999 ..........................................: - - - - - 100,000 or more ...........................................: - - - - - : Turkeys inventory ........................................farms: 297 50 194 36 17 number: 4,644 348 3,155 173 968 Turkeys sold .............................................farms: 95 16 61 9 9 number: 4,156 168 2,939 137 912 : CROPS : : Barley for grain .........................................farms: 1,322 459 554 258 51 acres: 538,586 159,176 190,937 136,667 51,806 bushels: 50,782,418 14,050,009 18,283,571 13,128,692 5,320,146 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,013 352 434 186 41 acres: 348,967 101,343 120,808 90,845 35,971 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 146 41 77 26 2 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 322 117 166 34 5 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 323 135 118 64 6 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 243 85 86 63 9 500 acres or more .........................................: 288 81 107 71 29 : Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 648 198 299 120 31 acres: 126,508 30,599 53,827 33,262 8,820 bushels: 22,937,258 5,710,236 10,010,441 5,467,570 1,749,011 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 648 198 299 120 31 acres: 126,508 30,599 53,827 33,262 8,820 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 147 46 81 19 1 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 216 79 83 41 13 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 153 38 81 29 5 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 77 23 33 13 8 500 acres or more .........................................: 55 12 21 18 4 : Corn for silage or greenchop .............................farms: 772 248 293 183 48 acres: 258,326 62,436 78,863 80,705 36,322 tons: 7,412,427 1,714,496 2,406,821 2,240,687 1,050,423 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 770 248 291 183 48 acres: (D) 62,436 (D) 80,705 36,322 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 97 44 35 18 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 238 84 108 37 9 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 210 55 72 63 20 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 97 32 34 25 6 500 acres or more .........................................: 130 33 44 40 13 : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas ..........farms: 227 88 92 43 4 acres: 35,063 9,795 13,417 (D) (D) cwt: 868,671 230,376 329,651 (D) (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 213 85 83 41 4 acres: 31,511 8,873 11,017 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 37 19 16 2 - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 92 34 34 22 2 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 62 26 26 10 - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 22 5 10 6 1 500 acres or more .........................................: 14 4 6 3 1 : Oats for grain ...........................................farms: 115 46 45 22 2 acres: 11,088 (D) 4,047 3,906 (D) bushels: 704,503 (D) 295,636 225,649 (D) Irrigated ..............................................farms: 41 12 19 10 - acres: 4,324 581 960 2,783 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 22 7 12 2 1 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 60 30 20 10 - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 27 8 10 8 1 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 3 1 2 - - 500 acres or more .........................................: 3 - 1 2 - : Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 5 4 1 - - acres: 485 (D) (D) - - bushels: 52,100 (D) (D) - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 4 4 - - - acres: (D) (D) - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 4 4 - - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 - 1 - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 8 4 4 - - acres: 304 (D) (D) - - bushels: 9,092 3,825 5,267 - - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 5 4 1 - - acres: 205 (D) (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: - - - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 8 4 4 - - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: - - - - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar .....................................farms: 452 159 188 74 31 acres: 178,358 32,539 64,291 45,135 36,393 tons: 6,570,132 1,182,230 2,396,379 1,669,501 1,322,022 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 452 159 188 74 31 acres: 178,358 32,539 64,291 45,135 36,393 : Sunflower seed, all ......................................farms: 10 4 5 1 - acres: 938 (D) 787 (D) - pounds: 1,500,019 (D) 1,247,519 (D) - Irrigated ..............................................farms: 9 4 5 - - acres: (D) (D) 787 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4 4 - - - 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 3 - 2 1 - 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 2 - 2 - - 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 1 - 1 - - 500 acres or more .........................................: - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all .....................................farms: 2,210 748 946 432 84 acres: 1,162,597 329,801 456,860 299,010 76,926 bushels: 93,723,621 25,120,455 35,404,443 25,985,653 7,213,070 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,318 434 559 262 63 acres: 448,708 102,287 145,109 151,547 49,765 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 256 88 120 27 21 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 539 217 239 74 9 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 480 153 221 96 10 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 317 89 128 81 19 500 acres or more .........................................: 618 201 238 154 25 : Forage-land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 10,279 3,188 5,657 1,202 232 acres: 1,415,865 412,970 598,301 323,594 81,000 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 1,516,969 2,084,649 1,353,189 406,313 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 8,042 2,481 4,384 978 199 acres: 1,102,400 325,323 444,315 261,423 71,339 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres .............................................: 4,884 1,463 3,088 257 76 25 to 99 acres ............................................: 2,460 839 1,277 303 41 100 to 249 acres ..........................................: 1,560 489 721 306 44 250 to 499 acres ..........................................: 703 224 310 147 22 500 acres or more .........................................: 672 173 261 189 49 : Alfalfa hay ............................................farms: 7,480 2,367 3,960 958 195 acres: 1,047,568 312,392 445,548 231,209 58,419 tons, dry: 3,926,331 1,145,576 1,581,166 949,343 250,246 Irrigated ............................................farms: 6,466 2,031 3,418 845 172 acres: 870,101 264,534 359,179 195,457 50,931 : Other dry hay ..........................................farms: 3,303 938 1,863 436 66 acres: 251,158 71,584 110,530 61,302 7,742 tons, dry: 582,333 156,093 250,749 157,930 17,561 Irrigated ............................................farms: 1,993 533 1,137 273 50 acres: 131,135 35,005 52,872 37,589 5,669 : Field and grass seed crops, all ..........................farms: 187 64 79 39 5 acres: 56,098 12,586 18,947 23,215 1,350 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 79 23 39 16 1 acres: 14,585 (D) 6,442 6,315 (D) : Land in vegetables .......................................farms: 1,235 333 623 229 50 acres: 334,276 53,514 100,474 113,597 66,690 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 1,232 332 621 229 50 acres: 334,263 (D) (D) 113,597 66,690 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 527 104 358 57 8 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 126 48 54 24 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 194 82 86 25 1 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 132 43 46 36 7 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 256 56 79 87 34 : Beans, snap ............................................farms: 195 43 137 15 - acres: 5,237 3,391 1,643 203 - Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 8 10 1 - acres: 767 (D) 473 (D) - : Peas, green ............................................farms: 105 18 65 22 - acres: 1,972 1,095 427 450 - Harvested for processing .............................farms: 4 2 1 1 - acres: 190 (D) (D) (D) - Potatoes ...............................................farms: 529 120 241 133 35 acres: 301,157 40,388 91,495 103,983 65,291 Harvested for processing .............................farms: 220 42 81 72 25 acres: 139,548 14,909 38,831 58,475 27,333 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ........................................: 118 17 86 15 - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 77. Summary by Operating Arrangements: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : One : Two : Three or : Five or Item : producers : producer : producers : four producers : more producers -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CROPS - Con. : : Land in vegetables - Con. : Potatoes - Con. : Farms by acres harvested: - Con. : : 5.0 to 24.9 acres .......................................: 20 3 10 7 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres ......................................: 90 38 43 8 1 100.0 to 249.9 acres ....................................: 78 20 29 28 1 250.0 acres or more .....................................: 223 42 73 75 33 : Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 221 58 131 32 - acres: 3,282 925 1,514 843 - Harvested for processing .............................farms: 19 5 12 2 - acres: 344 (D) 184 (D) - Sweet potatoes .........................................farms: 10 2 8 - - acres: 1 (D) (D) - - Harvested for processing .............................farms: - - - - - acres: - - - - - : Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 215 43 151 20 1 acres: 62 21 33 (D) (D) Harvested for processing .............................farms: 16 3 11 2 - acres: 3 1 (D) (D) - : Land in orchards .........................................farms: 567 125 372 55 15 acres: 5,523 3,686 1,101 663 73 Irrigated ..............................................farms: 565 125 372 53 15 acres: (D) 3,685 1,099 (D) 73 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ..........................................: 495 105 341 44 5 5.0 to 24.9 acres .........................................: 57 13 27 7 10 25.0 to 99.9 acres ........................................: 10 5 3 2 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres ......................................: 1 - - 1 - 250.0 acres or more .......................................: 4 2 1 1 - : Apples .................................................farms: 320 77 210 26 7 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,936 (D) 173 188 (D) : Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 137 27 90 12 8 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,175 286 665 192 32 : Peaches, all ...........................................farms: 132 25 87 19 1 bearing and nonbearing acres: 1,009 (D) 61 114 (D) : Almonds ................................................farms: 8 3 5 - - bearing and nonbearing acres: 2 (Z) 2 - - : Walnuts, English .......................................farms: 22 6 14 2 - bearing and nonbearing acres: 19 (D) 12 (D) - : Land in berries ..........................................farms: 268 55 190 18 5 acres: 207 32 144 27 3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included with total farm production expenses. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. 3/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 Land in farms .............................................acres: 11,547,963 112,556 145,570 419,823 209,678 130,471 897,796 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 505 99 636 418 594 544 831 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 35 10 75 16 138 80 24 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 2,124,863 1,289,520 1,749,283 1,150,006 1,644,398 1,493,103 3,147,174 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 4,209 13,084 2,752 2,753 2,768 2,747 3,789 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 4,930,153 114,641 24,775 101,309 47,334 33,811 332,628 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 215,507 100,386 108,186 100,805 134,092 140,878 307,704 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 5,785 568 22 367 32 10 335 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 6,977 441 63 285 69 83 299 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 3,901 59 64 129 104 84 157 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 2,515 41 34 105 69 23 104 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 1,384 10 11 60 31 19 55 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 2,315 23 35 59 48 21 131 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 15,823 746 137 695 288 188 657 acres: 5,623,516 42,862 15,981 180,641 80,192 76,672 363,334 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 13,037 662 119 471 256 129 561 acres: 4,370,363 32,982 14,039 60,578 61,633 58,997 323,793 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 14,191 987 154 565 261 25 855 acres: 3,167,499 35,479 19,136 29,291 44,212 127 330,319 : Market value of agricultural products sold ...............$1,000: 10,892,201 191,322 15,577 45,676 29,034 25,444 575,692 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 476,120 167,533 68,020 45,449 82,249 106,017 532,555 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 4,764,793 39,332 2,764 32,650 12,106 24,985 476,088 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 6,127,408 151,990 12,812 13,026 16,928 459 99,604 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 9,048 532 105 542 98 139 376 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 2,135 172 15 138 30 21 71 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 2,284 184 17 88 37 18 110 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 2,179 111 23 79 46 17 118 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 1,451 40 17 70 53 8 87 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 1,220 34 13 23 26 3 44 $100,000 or more .............................................: 4,560 69 39 65 63 34 275 : Government payments .......................................farms: 4,296 28 23 180 104 91 157 $1,000: 132,405 991 538 4,538 2,228 2,785 6,139 Total income from farm-related sources ....................farms: 7,733 197 96 207 140 74 353 $1,000: 327,387 4,243 1,117 6,481 2,242 4,185 21,952 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 9,317,904 188,082 13,121 48,805 27,246 26,940 489,011 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 407,304 164,695 57,296 48,562 77,185 112,251 452,369 : Net cash farm income of the operations ....................farms: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 $1,000: 2,034,090 8,474 4,111 7,890 6,257 5,474 114,772 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 88,914 7,421 17,950 7,851 17,727 22,808 106,172 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 8,956 412 96 381 163 68 510 number: 2,517,987 58,038 15,491 17,136 18,118 1,004 74,940 Beef cows .............................................farms: 7,379 294 79 308 156 61 428 number: 449,249 4,427 (D) 11,344 12,808 613 28,871 Milk cows .............................................farms: 549 20 2 17 11 - 21 number: 664,479 18,380 (D) 30 477 - 5,728 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 7,630 364 87 287 168 41 454 number: 1,835,062 38,011 12,032 11,201 13,514 372 56,394 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 562 30 2 32 4 2 19 number: 21,157 (D) (D) 372 8 (D) 572 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 663 30 - 24 4 7 27 number: 100,260 3,058 - 341 9 47 1,539 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 1,208 74 10 31 14 8 48 number: 230,681 956 477 714 (D) 114 19,568 Layers inventory ........................................farms: 3,514 258 18 206 38 39 140 number: 638,424 4,662 341 3,448 646 962 3,548 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 155 4 - 7 1 3 12 number: 11,815 305 - 139 (D) 66 434 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 648 17 1 - 7 - 5 acres: 126,508 3,130 (D) - 117 - 2,386 bushels: 22,937,258 728,992 (D) - 17,402 - 397,069 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 772 17 1 1 - - 24 acres: 258,326 6,446 (D) (D) - - 7,238 tons: 7,412,427 186,938 (D) (D) - - 184,454 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 2,210 42 - 34 15 27 141 acres: 1,162,597 6,061 - 26,897 7,024 31,436 136,688 bushels: 93,723,621 707,146 - 1,378,072 203,066 2,087,178 14,704,674 Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: 50 3 - - - - 3 acres: 10,250 29 - - - - 1,500 bushels: 801,586 2,845 - - - - 127,500 Other spring wheat for grain ..........................farms: 918 12 - 16 13 9 76 acres: 365,898 667 - 13,791 6,250 5,892 40,681 bushels: 25,659,376 63,810 - 597,316 180,192 246,867 4,149,588 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 1,706 29 - 26 8 24 111 acres: 786,449 5,365 - 13,106 774 25,544 94,507 bushels: 67,262,659 640,491 - 780,756 22,874 1,840,311 10,427,586 : Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 115 - - 1 - 2 5 acres: 11,088 - - (D) - (D) 171 bushels: 704,503 - - (D) - (D) 15,910 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 Land in farms .............................................acres: 259,553 66,311 97,446 406,594 73,364 99,988 186,429 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 1,279 614 122 455 230 680 1,680 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 53 40 25 15 60 235 320 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 4,546,428 1,260,748 749,956 2,223,574 1,308,731 2,333,216 3,452,115 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 3,556 2,053 6,142 4,884 5,691 3,430 2,055 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 57,600 5,484 55,403 183,434 41,791 43,668 33,167 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 283,744 50,775 69,428 205,413 131,007 297,061 298,798 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 37 39 128 284 46 13 3 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 64 21 384 296 107 25 27 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 27 23 170 100 92 28 21 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 13 14 71 71 31 38 10 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 10 2 23 50 20 6 18 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 52 9 22 92 23 37 32 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 153 49 514 622 244 123 94 acres: 65,168 5,603 29,739 245,149 47,442 62,624 91,268 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 144 45 413 531 212 106 82 acres: 52,396 (D) 18,710 186,338 42,455 57,766 77,542 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 177 63 168 687 56 125 48 acres: 65,992 1,537 1,104 143,393 2,500 58,948 32,523 : Market value of agricultural products sold ...............$1,000: 65,466 7,330 14,709 256,056 48,912 64,126 32,695 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 322,491 67,874 18,433 286,736 153,329 436,230 294,548 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 48,959 4,876 10,334 181,323 44,816 (D) 27,581 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 16,507 2,455 4,376 74,733 4,096 (D) 5,114 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 62 48 437 404 104 30 27 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 12 9 107 85 53 4 6 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 16 21 94 88 37 8 10 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 21 10 82 70 38 9 10 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 9 3 35 31 13 10 6 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 19 3 13 49 18 11 7 $100,000 or more .............................................: 64 14 30 166 56 75 45 : Government payments .......................................farms: 27 11 38 142 74 51 40 $1,000: 1,367 (D) 203 4,171 899 1,104 1,073 Total income from farm-related sources ....................farms: 94 31 213 291 115 64 49 $1,000: 2,655 59 5,647 7,982 2,684 1,646 3,341 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 52,548 4,459 20,964 208,865 44,616 41,275 20,620 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 258,859 41,288 26,271 233,892 139,861 280,781 185,763 : Net cash farm income of the operations ....................farms: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 $1,000: 16,939 3,016 -405 59,343 7,880 25,602 16,489 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 83,443 27,924 -508 66,454 24,701 174,160 148,548 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 61 60 226 272 120 64 25 number: 11,572 3,212 3,797 74,787 4,599 7,525 5,333 Beef cows .............................................farms: 53 53 184 231 104 56 21 number: 7,650 2,134 1,975 21,037 2,741 4,555 (D) Milk cows .............................................farms: - - 19 17 4 - 1 number: - - 69 426 78 - (D) Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 66 50 167 219 92 57 27 number: 13,433 2,489 1,677 53,553 2,655 6,440 4,470 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 2 - 53 32 6 2 4 number: (D) - 344 303 63 (D) 32 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 2 - 77 35 15 3 5 number: (D) - 756 292 355 52 35 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 15 5 72 72 6 11 3 number: 4,356 34 1,059 1,399 287 242 (D) Layers inventory ........................................farms: 21 23 250 139 48 10 10 number: 501 497 5,589 1,965 1,064 92 227 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: - - 7 - 5 - - number: - - 1,505 - 214 - - : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: - - - 9 2 7 1 acres: - - - 1,064 (D) 982 (D) bushels: - - - 212,914 (D) 108,200 (D) Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: - - - 11 - 4 3 acres: - - - 5,876 - 252 940 tons: - - - 112,298 - 5,134 28,760 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 2 - 4 91 32 20 12 acres: (D) - 242 52,438 15,905 9,017 7,314 bushels: (D) - (D) 3,362,173 1,353,747 974,075 407,885 Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - - - 7 - 1 - acres: - - - (D) - (D) - bushels: - - - (D) - (D) - Other spring wheat for grain ..........................farms: 1 - 4 48 19 8 12 acres: (D) - 242 27,612 2,405 (D) 7,314 bushels: (D) - (D) (D) 158,681 (D) 407,885 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 1 - - 57 28 14 - acres: (D) - - (D) 13,500 4,779 - bushels: (D) - - 1,637,151 1,195,066 562,851 - : Oats for grain ..........................................farms: - - 4 3 8 - 2 acres: - - 275 (D) 289 - (D) bushels: - - 7,994 (D) 28,359 - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 Land in farms .............................................acres: 277,388 416,460 657,664 206,127 66,230 113,930 296,190 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 120 1,044 1,187 3,077 243 485 1,043 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 10 267 144 1,227 75 90 23 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 1,630,909 2,700,250 5,325,531 9,543,693 866,083 1,739,725 3,371,456 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 13,588 2,587 4,486 3,102 3,570 3,588 3,233 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 430,845 97,440 323,304 23,865 22,279 37,562 103,406 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 186,432 244,212 583,581 356,189 81,607 159,840 364,107 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 1,056 27 103 2 12 33 100 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 789 78 115 1 99 61 67 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 207 56 82 11 85 54 23 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 122 96 77 10 54 37 38 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 73 46 35 8 11 27 12 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 64 96 142 35 12 23 44 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 1,362 270 400 47 190 148 150 acres: 228,177 202,628 366,476 74,836 23,877 35,609 101,245 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 1,166 212 348 34 146 138 128 acres: 203,509 144,142 294,586 53,344 11,318 30,101 80,780 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 1,913 176 409 36 19 193 190 acres: 207,577 54,189 274,053 48,780 45 44,972 78,012 : Market value of agricultural products sold ...............$1,000: 829,378 114,212 1,153,031 49,051 8,481 31,092 591,747 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 358,883 286,246 2,081,283 732,111 31,066 132,306 2,083,615 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 453,907 81,384 390,187 39,187 3,490 10,956 94,044 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 375,471 32,828 762,844 9,864 4,991 20,136 497,702 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 942 146 147 13 149 92 106 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 308 15 21 3 29 9 30 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 279 16 27 - 40 16 31 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 244 40 48 6 19 22 22 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 118 34 44 5 19 6 16 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 87 32 50 6 5 19 16 $100,000 or more .............................................: 333 116 217 34 12 71 63 : Government payments .......................................farms: 95 152 148 19 56 52 45 $1,000: 4,426 3,636 8,185 334 679 1,760 1,972 Total income from farm-related sources ....................farms: 619 187 267 27 102 117 88 $1,000: 26,659 7,037 25,102 1,963 1,783 6,210 8,059 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 727,202 98,011 998,960 43,706 9,276 29,792 511,442 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 314,670 245,641 1,803,176 652,326 33,978 126,774 1,800,853 : Net cash farm income of the operations ....................farms: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 $1,000: 133,261 26,875 187,358 7,642 1,666 9,270 90,335 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 57,664 67,355 338,191 114,064 6,103 39,447 318,082 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 1,064 158 265 36 78 99 137 number: 139,467 23,951 264,897 11,884 3,102 22,433 180,088 Beef cows .............................................farms: 877 138 203 33 73 88 101 number: 18,799 14,211 24,220 7,003 (D) 15,917 11,443 Milk cows .............................................farms: 52 7 27 - 1 3 17 number: 43,530 1,013 71,293 - (D) 11 28,860 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 784 163 223 34 69 92 101 number: 85,837 22,045 248,496 7,273 1,398 14,487 180,556 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 81 4 8 1 6 14 6 number: 1,206 49 (D) (D) 20 696 29 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 81 5 7 1 12 14 8 number: 1,342 228 (D) (D) 37 1,731 50 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 187 10 16 2 15 5 20 number: 15,767 825 10,144 (D) 228 719 455 Layers inventory ........................................farms: 496 46 32 1 32 22 61 number: 31,361 867 (D) (D) 629 568 1,583 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 42 4 2 - - 1 3 number: 4,198 96 (D) - - (D) (D) : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 169 1 13 1 - - 15 acres: 23,758 (D) 1,843 (D) - - 7,377 bushels: 4,761,399 (D) 300,855 (D) - - 1,114,538 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 119 3 64 4 - 2 10 acres: 23,669 309 38,193 1,518 - (D) 8,473 tons: 657,566 6,843 1,169,603 27,196 - (D) 252,054 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 239 63 112 9 8 7 23 acres: 38,781 43,544 68,041 7,257 2,882 (D) 12,138 bushels: 4,703,118 1,942,439 5,791,969 794,021 176,538 9,185 1,131,189 Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - 4 1 - - - 2 acres: - 144 (D) - - - (D) bushels: - 10,818 (D) - - - (D) Other spring wheat for grain ..........................farms: 66 33 45 8 2 7 11 acres: 5,770 16,643 (D) 5,792 (D) (D) (D) bushels: 592,598 577,316 (D) 631,871 (D) 9,185 (D) Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 195 50 98 3 8 - 16 acres: 33,011 26,757 48,246 1,465 (D) - 8,180 bushels: 4,110,520 1,354,305 3,936,337 162,150 (D) - 850,588 : Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 3 9 11 - - - 2 acres: (D) 2,046 839 - - - (D) bushels: (D) 139,768 84,133 - - - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 Land in farms .............................................acres: 276,073 275,247 199,547 212,600 545,260 262,180 180,152 107,727 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 380 505 278 426 783 386 402 111 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 62 110 12 45 112 20 43 20 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 1,244,629 2,430,566 1,115,626 3,025,220 1,854,419 1,964,306 3,624,061 1,229,716 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 3,278 4,813 4,014 7,101 2,367 5,087 9,012 11,050 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 134,973 155,387 61,892 187,674 95,815 183,548 189,104 63,143 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 185,657 285,113 86,200 376,100 137,665 270,322 422,107 65,231 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 154 79 298 122 48 193 119 187 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 187 117 226 143 202 231 112 481 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 131 170 98 87 148 105 57 191 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 121 84 29 63 112 45 67 59 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 61 43 30 39 65 41 45 33 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 73 52 37 45 121 64 48 17 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 582 427 494 324 535 486 300 650 acres: 114,176 203,276 27,426 140,588 171,167 182,195 150,930 55,698 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 466 291 432 290 435 454 276 465 acres: 74,567 165,603 19,873 125,314 123,368 171,192 132,964 36,706 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 441 307 592 410 64 565 384 261 acres: 50,893 96,574 25,735 132,731 1,409 143,448 139,509 6,315 : Market value of agricultural products sold ...............$1,000: 131,820 247,228 37,861 1,117,613 76,139 380,801 944,081 23,353 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 181,321 453,630 52,731 2,239,706 109,395 560,827 2,107,323 24,125 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 37,557 228,065 22,149 135,890 49,927 216,106 201,101 19,591 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 94,264 19,163 15,711 981,724 26,212 164,696 742,980 3,762 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 274 225 275 135 278 219 103 563 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 54 26 110 26 44 77 34 114 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 67 33 106 44 59 69 49 120 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 101 43 88 51 68 69 44 78 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 69 42 39 28 66 50 17 38 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 45 38 38 41 49 40 24 25 $100,000 or more .............................................: 117 138 62 174 132 155 177 30 : Government payments .......................................farms: 205 145 58 48 280 84 50 118 $1,000: 2,302 3,549 1,154 4,232 10,092 1,814 1,186 1,213 Total income from farm-related sources ....................farms: 268 230 156 197 283 258 177 207 $1,000: 4,371 7,105 2,726 20,284 9,203 7,424 13,194 4,084 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 98,731 192,088 37,829 919,478 75,126 329,729 793,774 31,140 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 135,806 352,455 52,687 1,842,641 107,940 485,610 1,771,818 32,169 : Net cash farm income of the operations ....................farms: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 $1,000: 39,763 65,794 3,911 222,651 20,307 60,311 164,687 -2,489 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 54,694 120,724 5,448 446,195 29,177 88,823 367,604 -2,571 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 277 161 330 273 309 282 209 252 number: 35,274 17,675 16,043 346,237 25,989 74,255 269,031 3,692 Beef cows .............................................farms: 207 148 271 210 276 216 145 210 number: 10,827 (D) 9,523 9,787 15,201 15,199 11,176 1,956 Milk cows .............................................farms: 44 4 17 37 7 22 27 20 number: 10,314 (D) 499 165,205 19 15,086 103,043 41 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 235 165 263 216 253 259 205 186 number: 16,495 15,581 9,614 177,712 14,177 50,323 200,234 2,016 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 21 6 23 8 13 18 11 44 number: 165 79 102 24 730 139 115 268 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 29 6 23 4 11 31 8 56 number: 351 12 335 8 1,687 205 111 820 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 11 13 61 16 13 38 16 59 number: (D) (D) 4,359 (D) 485 18,901 312 866 Layers inventory ........................................farms: 94 41 163 45 73 95 39 259 number: (D) 938 2,622 556 1,233 1,638 (D) 4,617 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 3 1 5 2 - 6 4 8 number: 72 (D) 116 (D) - 325 260 142 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 14 - 31 63 1 14 18 - acres: 929 - 3,254 14,883 (D) 1,801 4,715 - bushels: 140,300 - 611,442 2,809,241 (D) 172,040 821,226 - Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 33 4 8 96 - 27 88 - acres: 5,361 233 417 44,114 - 7,533 25,138 - tons: 129,312 6,291 12,202 1,377,743 - 173,987 784,053 - Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 52 70 33 33 111 58 54 13 acres: 11,914 37,174 2,866 7,047 59,237 24,511 8,373 8,183 bushels: 583,025 1,903,986 315,675 632,544 4,159,000 2,279,582 1,102,703 723,436 Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: 3 4 3 - - 3 - - acres: 502 852 45 - - 135 - - bushels: 56,800 84,900 4,377 - - 13,196 - - Other spring wheat for grain ..........................farms: 13 49 7 14 36 37 14 4 acres: 450 28,560 1,251 985 7,462 13,838 1,029 567 bushels: 23,712 1,222,175 112,790 93,733 399,220 1,082,295 121,420 25,490 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 43 35 24 20 107 27 43 12 acres: 10,962 7,762 1,570 6,062 51,775 10,538 7,344 7,616 bushels: 502,513 596,911 198,508 538,811 3,759,780 1,184,091 981,283 697,946 : Oats for grain ..........................................farms: - - 1 3 14 1 - 7 acres: - - (D) 420 501 (D) - 545 bushels: - - (D) 63,000 17,920 (D) - 23,942 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 Land in farms .............................................acres: 324,990 131,616 249,015 104,847 166,920 308,562 344,412 327,714 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 329 430 1,137 458 466 680 830 735 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 55 40 320 150 89 32 76 160 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 1,138,328 1,697,584 3,205,743 2,618,687 2,538,496 4,215,485 2,619,497 1,929,142 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 3,464 3,947 2,819 5,720 5,444 6,202 3,156 2,625 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 151,680 43,477 75,141 80,824 128,536 209,668 98,862 77,138 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 153,367 142,081 343,110 352,944 359,040 461,823 238,221 172,956 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 97 66 6 33 70 137 90 65 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 368 99 29 39 71 115 96 82 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 276 52 54 59 76 63 57 97 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 120 38 31 42 58 50 66 74 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 58 27 34 22 38 25 30 53 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 70 24 65 34 45 64 76 75 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 808 186 185 159 294 313 311 370 acres: 228,085 37,311 167,431 60,741 142,882 278,599 207,955 171,013 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 524 166 128 135 273 296 240 261 acres: 177,685 32,381 136,707 50,547 125,298 238,687 164,374 84,770 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 89 244 13 167 315 389 78 206 acres: 424 60,672 379 55,844 83,468 239,043 411 29,319 : Market value of agricultural products sold ...............$1,000: 101,510 32,180 76,489 254,603 212,410 547,338 95,985 53,734 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 102,640 105,163 349,264 1,111,806 593,324 1,205,590 231,289 120,479 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 97,626 8,060 (D) 35,359 206,490 412,353 89,503 37,465 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 3,885 24,120 (D) 219,244 5,920 134,985 6,482 16,269 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 572 105 83 57 95 106 192 187 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 64 20 7 20 16 28 24 20 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 87 28 9 21 17 59 33 30 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 75 36 10 21 30 47 29 42 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 49 28 21 5 21 18 19 39 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 20 24 7 21 21 36 23 41 $100,000 or more .............................................: 122 65 82 84 158 160 95 87 : Government payments .......................................farms: 422 61 149 51 57 79 171 200 $1,000: 9,712 1,568 9,427 1,487 2,432 3,843 7,777 5,183 Total income from farm-related sources ....................farms: 386 96 128 78 182 208 158 155 $1,000: 8,770 1,644 15,071 3,802 9,340 18,189 7,104 4,643 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 95,102 25,897 70,617 219,158 162,823 484,262 90,727 55,809 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 96,160 84,632 322,453 957,022 454,812 1,066,657 218,620 125,132 : Net cash farm income of the operations ....................farms: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 $1,000: 24,890 9,493 30,370 40,735 61,359 85,107 20,139 7,750 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 25,167 31,024 138,677 177,882 171,395 187,461 48,527 17,377 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 153 149 61 110 101 191 124 170 number: 4,012 25,991 4,502 64,302 8,125 54,709 9,115 23,256 Beef cows .............................................farms: 123 130 57 94 85 166 109 152 number: 2,156 18,291 2,373 4,947 (D) 10,408 5,472 (D) Milk cows .............................................farms: 8 6 - 15 2 15 4 2 number: 15 11 - 29,295 (D) 18,626 4 (D) Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 112 141 59 117 93 185 118 143 number: 1,683 18,749 2,704 39,040 4,266 21,619 4,864 14,305 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 15 3 4 3 5 12 6 4 number: (D) 12 33 40 (D) 83 586 34 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 23 9 2 2 5 12 4 11 number: (D) 34 (D) (D) (D) 124 1,264 123 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 68 31 2 23 10 28 12 11 number: 1,121 674 (D) 442 57 67,141 457 246 Layers inventory ........................................farms: 97 55 16 23 23 45 58 48 number: 1,777 988 211 526 352 667 949 1,029 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: 4 4 - - - - - - number: 998 750 - - - - - - : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: - - 1 7 1 6 - 3 acres: - - (D) 1,406 (D) 9,019 - (D) bushels: - - (D) 239,971 (D) 1,412,952 - (D) Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: - - - 13 8 15 - 2 acres: - - - 9,211 793 11,907 - (D) tons: - - - 282,504 19,476 292,290 - (D) Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 130 - 78 18 110 38 98 47 acres: 89,496 - 76,391 5,186 45,667 35,897 94,155 31,703 bushels: 7,146,371 - 5,853,644 510,500 3,022,780 3,756,870 7,760,748 1,263,570 Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: - - - 1 3 3 2 - acres: - - - (D) (D) (D) (D) - bushels: - - - (D) (D) 164,008 (D) - Other spring wheat for grain ..........................farms: 57 - 21 6 93 31 39 12 acres: 15,851 - 9,284 2,671 38,998 18,678 (D) 4,497 bushels: 976,169 - 585,106 (D) 2,518,584 1,803,841 (D) 257,715 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 117 - 78 14 24 14 95 44 acres: 73,645 - 67,107 (D) (D) (D) 74,310 27,206 bushels: 6,170,202 - 5,268,538 282,881 (D) 1,789,021 6,324,889 1,005,855 : Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 3 - 16 2 1 3 3 - acres: 89 - 2,183 (D) (D) 25 155 - bushels: 3,094 - 102,699 (D) (D) 2,350 4,940 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ....................................................number: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 Land in farms .............................................acres: 729,407 171,424 443,958 1,605 112,072 459,167 45,321 428,579 Average size of farm ..................................acres: 1,582 299 1,609 36 418 393 319 866 Median size of farm ...................................acres: 70 22 480 15 80 34 40 50 : Estimated market value of land and buildings: : Average per farm ....................................dollars: 3,204,064 1,550,368 6,320,874 311,600 2,304,916 2,407,193 1,244,669 1,990,807 Average per acre ....................................dollars: 2,025 5,191 3,930 8,542 5,512 6,129 3,900 2,299 : Estimated market value of all machinery and : equipment ...............................................$1,000: 127,776 121,343 167,688 4,587 55,213 310,067 15,205 77,666 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 277,171 211,399 607,563 104,246 206,017 265,241 107,078 156,901 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres .................................................: 86 180 26 7 21 352 23 109 10 to 49 acres ...............................................: 126 211 38 31 81 323 61 134 50 to 179 acres ..............................................: 82 90 39 5 78 200 26 84 180 to 499 acres .............................................: 57 47 37 1 26 151 14 65 500 to 999 acres .............................................: 31 18 40 - 25 63 6 30 1,000 acres or more ..........................................: 79 28 96 - 37 80 12 73 : Total cropland ............................................farms: 286 367 225 22 219 780 68 355 acres: 129,722 64,778 343,636 559 80,005 249,600 6,428 69,792 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 266 336 139 14 161 712 56 318 acres: 109,288 53,527 196,858 (D) 65,452 225,508 4,783 48,753 : Irrigated land ............................................farms: 373 483 132 6 162 965 77 361 acres: 108,395 62,350 115,184 9 40,705 236,196 15,245 51,052 : Market value of agricultural products sold ...............$1,000: 463,023 313,664 360,522 222 62,626 1,135,933 12,423 61,610 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 1,004,388 546,453 1,306,241 5,053 233,680 971,714 87,487 124,465 : Crops, including nursery and greenhouse crops ..........$1,000: 98,692 81,867 299,477 85 57,258 279,269 1,685 39,570 Livestock, poultry, and their products .................$1,000: 364,331 231,798 61,045 137 5,368 856,664 10,738 22,040 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $2,500 .............................................: 107 178 117 23 108 332 61 154 $2,500 to $4,999 .............................................: 40 71 12 6 9 99 20 56 $5,000 to $9,999 .............................................: 37 74 11 9 30 108 8 39 $10,000 to $24,999 ...........................................: 53 66 21 3 16 96 3 54 $25,000 to $49,999 ...........................................: 34 43 19 3 24 103 16 36 $50,000 to $99,999 ...........................................: 40 35 14 - 19 75 15 51 $100,000 or more .............................................: 150 107 82 - 62 356 19 105 : Government payments .......................................farms: 67 34 164 1 74 156 6 83 $1,000: 3,471 236 7,066 (D) 897 4,192 (D) 2,303 Total income from farm-related sources ....................farms: 129 184 135 10 111 432 65 169 $1,000: 9,032 8,930 9,876 190 1,341 15,121 813 4,082 : Total farm production expenses ...........................$1,000: 378,345 263,797 326,330 522 58,288 943,015 10,032 50,344 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 820,705 459,577 1,182,354 11,857 217,493 806,685 70,647 101,704 : Net cash farm income of the operations ....................farms: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 $1,000: 97,181 59,034 51,135 -107 6,576 212,232 3,360 17,651 Average per farm ....................................dollars: 210,804 102,846 185,271 -2,438 24,538 181,550 23,659 35,660 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory .............................farms: 257 252 76 16 76 562 56 214 number: 190,536 74,969 31,014 161 6,471 253,687 8,486 29,081 Beef cows .............................................farms: 224 194 64 16 73 440 46 182 number: 39,666 8,652 (D) 90 3,897 24,246 3,106 15,022 Milk cows .............................................farms: 11 14 2 3 6 58 - 6 number: 24,518 16,096 (D) 12 16 108,379 - 10 Cattle and calves sold ..................................farms: 235 230 72 6 75 461 54 202 number: 194,998 73,333 21,204 53 4,348 143,782 10,559 17,070 Hogs and pigs inventory .................................farms: 6 7 - 8 4 28 - 5 number: 71 13 - 14 158 823 - 26 Hogs and pigs sold ......................................farms: 7 9 - - 8 33 3 10 number: 112 27 - - 306 (D) 18 70 Sheep and lambs inventory ...............................farms: 27 40 1 - 12 58 8 26 number: 11,347 1,060 (D) - 175 6,717 73 5,988 Layers inventory ........................................farms: 54 82 15 20 30 162 18 69 number: 740 1,608 160 318 1,493 (D) 430 1,160 Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ..............farms: - 7 - 6 1 4 7 2 number: - 308 - 120 (D) 304 201 (D) : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ..........................................farms: 60 48 10 - 1 103 - 19 acres: 15,508 5,428 5,423 - (D) 15,650 - 2,666 bushels: 2,877,271 1,126,752 830,460 - (D) 2,923,426 - 535,261 Corn for silage or greenchop ............................farms: 29 30 4 - 1 138 - 13 acres: 11,115 5,733 904 - (D) 41,145 - 874 tons: 247,880 161,485 23,392 - (D) 1,222,347 - 24,430 Wheat for grain, all ....................................farms: 47 60 68 - 12 166 - 33 acres: 14,926 6,945 102,492 - 7,822 19,625 - 6,857 bushels: 1,247,631 823,962 7,176,291 - 474,569 2,507,738 - 706,401 Durum wheat for grain .................................farms: 1 1 4 - - 1 - - acres: (D) (D) 675 - - (D) - - bushels: (D) (D) 69,044 - - (D) - - Other spring wheat for grain ..........................farms: 5 3 40 - 9 33 - 5 acres: (D) (D) 29,990 - 4,480 (D) - 527 bushels: (D) (D) 2,147,031 - 366,115 (D) - 41,965 Winter wheat for grain ................................farms: 44 56 53 - 5 153 - 30 acres: 12,133 (D) 71,827 - 3,342 17,823 - 6,330 bushels: 1,092,070 (D) 4,960,216 - 108,454 2,301,136 - 664,436 : Oats for grain ..........................................farms: 1 - - - 1 2 5 2 acres: (D) - - - (D) (D) 1,238 (D) bushels: (D) - - - (D) (D) (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : Barley for grain ........................................farms: 1,322 4 - 12 20 4 56 acres: 538,586 104 - 2,060 3,633 588 23,025 bushels: 50,782,418 10,778 - 133,980 208,857 24,136 2,637,136 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: 5 - - - - - - acres: 485 - - - - - - bushels: 52,100 - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: 5 - - - - - - acres: 2,082 - - - - - - tons: 39,562 - - - - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: 8 - - - - - - acres: 304 - - - - - - bushels: 9,092 - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ..............................................farms: 227 3 - - - - 1 acres: 35,063 347 - - - - (D) cwt: 868,671 7,298 - - - - (D) : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ............................farms: 10,279 529 107 372 246 87 459 acres: 1,415,865 14,184 13,962 28,017 50,840 11,059 80,538 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 60,941 29,084 76,716 80,847 31,671 327,927 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: 10 - - - - - - acres: 938 - - - - - - pounds: 1,500,019 - - - - - - Sugarbeets for sugar or seed ............................farms: 452 6 - 2 - - 23 acres: 178,358 756 - (D) - - 16,259 tons: 6,570,132 27,076 - (D) - - 622,879 : Vegetables harvested for sale ...........................farms: 1,235 53 3 53 7 4 75 acres: 337,060 753 (D) 1,742 5 11 55,374 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 529 8 - 28 - 1 71 acres: 301,157 1 - (D) - (D) 55,359 Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: 10 1 - - - - - acres: 1 (D) - - - - - : Land in orchards ........................................farms: 567 43 8 38 2 7 10 acres: 5,523 94 10 37 (D) 2 20 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : Barley for grain ........................................farms: 17 - 4 91 12 21 26 acres: 15,386 - 240 60,907 2,222 3,981 9,389 bushels: 1,896,718 - 24,653 5,088,059 227,755 333,140 462,030 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ..............................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - cwt: - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ............................farms: 129 30 326 404 146 94 76 acres: 33,196 802 17,259 46,574 12,005 42,027 57,723 tons, dry equivalent: 126,296 2,833 24,482 164,441 33,826 190,534 92,095 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Sugarbeets for sugar or seed ............................farms: - - - - - 1 - acres: - - - - - (D) - tons: - - - - - (D) - : Vegetables harvested for sale ...........................farms: 9 - 42 59 10 5 3 acres: (D) - 37 16,030 6 (D) 2 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 4 - 6 33 1 1 - acres: (D) - (D) 15,932 (D) (D) - Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - : Land in orchards ........................................farms: 2 5 35 14 26 1 - acres: (D) 5 45 21 31 (D) - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : Barley for grain ........................................farms: 29 65 53 5 1 5 5 acres: 1,043 53,200 30,028 4,799 (D) 610 2,350 bushels: 145,290 2,890,386 4,260,740 354,256 (D) 50,200 62,400 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: 1 2 - - - - - acres: (D) (D) - - - - - tons: (D) (D) - - - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - bushels: 3,825 - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ..............................................farms: 28 - 20 - - - 8 acres: 2,991 - 4,847 - - - 1,073 cwt: 81,403 - 118,331 - - - 27,979 : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ............................farms: 846 163 274 33 122 137 121 acres: 47,739 31,988 73,373 38,627 7,651 29,267 39,859 tons, dry equivalent: 185,306 75,011 350,057 152,613 14,886 89,814 179,623 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - pounds: (D) - - - - - - Sugarbeets for sugar or seed ............................farms: 88 - 72 - - - 3 acres: 13,175 - 40,215 - - - 1,708 tons: 504,708 - 1,441,877 - - - 69,920 : Vegetables harvested for sale ...........................farms: 190 24 40 - 7 1 9 acres: 22,531 6,688 30,531 - 5 (D) 5,262 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 20 24 30 - 3 - 9 acres: 3,566 (D) 30,040 - 1 - 5,262 Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - : Land in orchards ........................................farms: 90 1 - - 4 2 2 acres: 4,065 (D) - - (D) (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : Barley for grain ........................................farms: 45 103 5 38 32 91 74 5 acres: 3,179 74,679 602 7,241 3,864 39,633 21,926 795 bushels: 230,241 6,627,560 82,651 977,690 222,154 3,622,584 3,125,685 41,360 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: 1 - - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - - tons: (D) - - - - - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - 2 - - acres: - - - - - (D) - - bushels: - - - - - (D) - - Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ..............................................farms: 1 - - 1 1 - 27 1 acres: (D) - - (D) (D) - 4,431 (D) cwt: (D) - - (D) (D) - 112,701 (D) : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ............................farms: 429 209 336 213 361 401 220 352 acres: 46,244 31,596 11,081 45,541 35,590 76,282 40,045 22,673 tons, dry equivalent: 136,817 107,095 40,972 298,784 63,522 380,751 271,731 51,647 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - - - 1 - - - acres: - - - - (D) - - - pounds: - - - - (D) - - - Sugarbeets for sugar or seed ............................farms: - - 1 16 - - 42 - acres: - - (D) 1,886 - - 17,530 - tons: - - (D) 77,634 - - 694,824 - : Vegetables harvested for sale ...........................farms: 11 56 38 27 5 32 27 39 acres: (D) 20,313 654 4,088 5 19,616 10,370 49 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 1 51 10 7 - 13 7 15 acres: (D) 20,309 9 3,789 - 19,577 9,756 2 Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - - 3 - - - - - acres: - - (D) - - - - - : Land in orchards ........................................farms: 16 2 60 9 21 11 1 38 acres: 19 (D) 309 15 23 10 (D) 29 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 1. County Summary Highlights: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : Barley for grain ........................................farms: 41 3 27 19 78 85 20 3 acres: 7,928 386 6,756 3,172 36,614 40,218 4,487 120 bushels: 540,959 37,706 478,628 381,079 2,887,589 5,150,639 333,156 9,300 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - tons: - - - - - - - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: 1 - - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - - Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ..............................................farms: 5 - 1 2 1 16 4 - acres: 1,262 - (D) (D) (D) 6,039 998 - cwt: 20,205 - (D) (D) (D) 161,813 24,315 - : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ............................farms: 336 148 68 114 154 225 132 217 acres: 30,154 31,938 7,797 28,405 14,546 36,478 12,197 37,101 tons, dry equivalent: 79,592 95,879 17,900 141,375 62,151 195,663 23,207 92,086 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Sugarbeets for sugar or seed ............................farms: - - - 16 - 88 - - acres: - - - 2,369 - 53,439 - - tons: - - - 92,164 - 1,875,462 - - : Vegetables harvested for sale ...........................farms: 32 16 - 2 83 35 15 5 acres: 44 12 - (D) 26,216 45,079 15 (D) Potatoes ..............................................farms: 7 1 - 2 76 20 4 1 acres: 2 (D) - (D) 25,899 43,274 (Z) (D) Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - - - - - - - 1 acres: - - - - - - - (D) : Land in orchards ........................................farms: 22 10 1 - 5 1 14 4 acres: 40 17 (D) - 7 (D) 34 3 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : Barley for grain ........................................farms: - 3 10 - 49 151 - 10 acres: - (D) 4,963 - 32,418 35,228 - 730 bushels: - (D) 491,554 - 1,777,302 4,870,718 - 75,636 Sorghum for grain .......................................farms: 1 - - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - - Sorghum for silage or greenchop .........................farms: - - - - - 1 - - acres: - - - - - (D) - - tons: - - - - - (D) - - Soybeans for beans ......................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - acres: - - - - - (D) - - bushels: - - - - - (D) - - Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ..............................................farms: 11 4 3 - - 82 - 7 acres: 1,182 491 1,121 - - 6,599 - 611 cwt: 30,906 9,328 29,700 - - 157,388 - 16,355 : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ............................farms: 223 272 88 11 122 600 48 299 acres: 52,823 23,068 17,318 308 18,801 81,871 3,467 33,851 tons, dry equivalent: 198,424 123,780 84,632 398 38,568 458,293 5,708 103,142 Sunflower seed, all .....................................farms: 5 - - - - - - - acres: 787 - - - - - - - pounds: 1,247,519 - - - - - - - Sugarbeets for sugar or seed ............................farms: 18 12 19 - - 39 - 6 acres: 3,390 3,799 13,589 - - 8,343 - 716 tons: 138,829 151,834 472,791 - - 332,595 - 22,939 : Vegetables harvested for sale ...........................farms: 16 62 27 2 19 74 5 13 acres: (D) 7,247 38,419 (D) 3,321 10,375 (D) 2,109 Potatoes ..............................................farms: 3 15 27 - 15 15 - - acres: (D) 2,911 38,409 - 3,306 5,799 - - Sweet potatoes ........................................farms: - 5 - - - - - - acres: - 1 - - - - - - : Land in orchards ........................................farms: 2 33 - 4 1 16 - 6 acres: (D) 519 - 4 (D) 75 - 47 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD : : Total sales .........................................farms, 2022: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 2017: 24,996 1,304 232 757 395 288 1,177 $1,000, 2022: 10,892,201 191,322 15,577 45,676 29,034 25,444 575,692 2017: 7,567,439 131,621 12,599 37,807 36,514 19,111 453,144 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 476,120 167,533 68,020 45,449 82,249 106,017 532,555 2017: 302,746 100,936 54,305 49,944 92,441 66,357 385,000 : 2022 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 6,418 311 89 402 79 112 253 $1,000: 663 52 9 39 9 12 22 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 2,630 221 16 140 19 27 123 $1,000: 4,344 354 26 237 34 41 199 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 2,135 172 15 138 30 21 71 $1,000: 7,640 600 50 490 113 76 245 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 2,284 184 17 88 37 18 110 $1,000: 15,832 1,267 132 608 273 118 814 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 1,726 92 15 69 34 14 89 $1,000: 24,274 1,272 204 942 481 199 1,282 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 453 19 8 10 12 3 29 $1,000: 10,023 408 179 220 269 70 652 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 1,030 25 10 52 40 8 62 $1,000: 32,550 807 324 1,694 1,207 246 1,882 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 421 15 7 18 13 - 25 $1,000: 18,602 681 312 809 558 - 1,114 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 1,220 34 13 23 26 3 44 $1,000: 86,286 2,221 970 1,683 1,849 225 3,074 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 1,392 31 24 25 34 6 75 $1,000: 224,272 4,747 3,636 3,913 5,605 690 12,235 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 1,079 9 5 26 14 16 63 $1,000: 385,349 2,802 1,521 9,059 5,167 6,186 23,421 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 2,089 29 10 14 15 12 137 $1,000: 10,082,366 176,113 8,215 25,981 13,469 17,582 530,752 : 2017 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 7,412 488 84 269 84 134 236 $1,000: 1,459 113 (D) 31 15 30 41 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 2,793 204 17 76 17 30 161 $1,000: 4,577 330 27 113 31 60 276 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 2,475 199 18 71 35 24 114 $1,000: 8,874 707 70 247 142 89 421 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 2,358 139 23 87 45 25 113 $1,000: 16,372 960 150 612 305 172 779 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 1,883 106 18 78 35 19 72 $1,000: 26,423 1,441 248 1,122 498 265 1,009 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 569 21 6 25 18 3 37 $1,000: 12,583 462 127 551 382 69 811 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 1,140 39 21 40 26 4 48 $1,000: 35,702 1,220 655 1,223 808 (D) 1,472 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 398 12 1 8 22 1 17 $1,000: 17,687 532 (D) 369 951 (D) 753 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 1,381 23 14 31 32 13 88 $1,000: 96,756 1,441 1,040 2,270 2,289 893 6,039 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 1,635 26 19 37 34 9 72 $1,000: 260,609 3,770 3,152 5,833 6,097 1,433 12,520 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 1,142 10 4 22 36 14 60 $1,000: 406,615 2,930 1,579 7,590 14,483 5,107 20,813 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 1,810 37 7 13 11 12 159 $1,000: 6,679,781 117,714 5,492 17,846 10,512 10,827 408,210 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2022: 10,455 495 80 358 191 108 451 2017: 12,384 609 107 283 188 139 539 $1,000, 2022: 4,764,793 39,332 2,764 32,650 12,106 24,985 476,088 2017: 3,210,834 42,835 3,198 21,466 17,492 18,464 352,322 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2022: 3,530 56 2 44 33 30 163 2017: 4,338 95 4 79 55 42 219 $1,000, 2022: 1,626,831 12,219 (D) 11,843 (D) 18,182 146,545 2017: 1,049,101 14,311 120 8,440 4,480 10,664 80,089 Corn ........................................farms, 2022: 1,117 24 2 1 5 - 21 2017: 1,380 53 3 2 - - 18 $1,000, 2022: 405,868 6,285 (D) (D) 7 - (D) 2017: 280,789 9,583 (D) (D) - - 4,901 Wheat .......................................farms, 2022: 2,203 42 - 34 15 27 141 2017: 2,584 62 2 55 21 32 167 $1,000, 2022: 744,115 5,568 - 10,555 1,695 14,783 111,367 2017: 411,336 3,752 (D) 6,216 1,721 7,280 64,340 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2022: 8 - - - - - - 2017: 2 1 - - - - - $1,000, 2022: 135 - - - - - - 2017: (D) (D) - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2022: 6 - - - - - - 2017: 20 1 - - - - - $1,000, 2022: 337 - - - - - - 2017: (D) (D) - - - - - : Barley ......................................farms, 2022: 1,319 4 - 12 20 4 56 2017: 1,667 15 - 38 47 12 80 $1,000, 2022: 349,414 24 - 787 (D) 138 20,542 2017: 231,931 (D) - 1,794 2,701 221 10,476 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD : : Total sales .........................................farms, 2022: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 2017: 190 90 1,213 1,109 348 189 151 $1,000, 2022: 65,466 7,330 14,709 256,056 48,912 64,126 32,695 2017: 27,153 2,586 10,196 167,862 30,800 42,179 24,687 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 322,491 67,874 18,433 286,736 153,329 436,230 294,548 2017: 142,908 28,737 8,406 151,363 88,506 223,167 163,491 : 2022 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 44 39 261 279 63 27 18 $1,000: 2 (D) 35 17 8 (D) - $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 18 9 176 125 41 3 9 $1,000: 35 (D) 282 201 69 (D) (D) $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 12 9 107 85 53 4 6 $1,000: 47 30 380 278 195 13 17 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 16 21 94 88 37 8 10 $1,000: 128 149 629 635 255 48 63 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 15 7 69 54 31 8 8 $1,000: 218 117 1,003 775 428 119 130 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 6 3 13 16 7 1 2 $1,000: 133 67 296 349 160 (D) (D) $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 7 1 27 24 11 7 6 $1,000: (D) (D) 836 758 (D) 257 210 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 2 2 8 7 2 3 - $1,000: (D) (D) 372 308 (D) 125 - : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 19 3 13 49 18 11 7 $1,000: 1,282 207 897 3,520 1,389 871 486 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 22 6 21 55 18 23 14 $1,000: 3,125 887 4,087 8,357 2,525 3,154 2,329 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 17 3 5 57 7 19 16 $1,000: 6,055 968 1,927 19,636 2,312 6,013 6,325 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 25 5 4 54 31 33 15 $1,000: 54,153 4,770 3,965 221,221 41,124 53,498 23,080 : 2017 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 46 37 610 416 94 21 30 $1,000: (D) (D) 152 74 10 2 10 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 11 12 222 133 35 10 23 $1,000: (D) 19 350 215 57 13 35 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 18 8 149 108 40 11 9 $1,000: 66 (D) (D) 382 152 37 28 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 14 10 83 96 33 14 7 $1,000: 92 66 564 660 222 97 46 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 20 9 67 85 40 21 14 $1,000: 271 115 934 1,161 514 296 201 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 4 - 11 23 11 5 8 $1,000: 90 - 241 498 235 118 171 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 15 4 23 46 24 12 1 $1,000: 486 119 760 1,417 761 374 (D) $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 5 3 4 13 6 5 3 $1,000: 209 125 181 573 264 220 (D) : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 9 2 23 59 19 22 12 $1,000: 632 (D) 1,483 4,276 1,347 1,552 784 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 20 2 15 58 22 22 27 $1,000: 3,270 (D) 1,885 9,394 3,401 3,505 4,055 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 17 1 3 32 12 14 6 $1,000: 6,159 (D) (D) 10,773 3,728 5,023 2,002 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 11 2 3 40 12 32 11 $1,000: 15,861 (D) (D) 138,437 20,108 30,941 17,180 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2022: 115 20 315 425 184 100 73 2017: 110 39 593 522 199 143 106 $1,000, 2022: 48,959 4,876 10,334 181,323 44,816 (D) 27,581 2017: 16,669 1,547 6,142 110,833 26,927 35,667 20,470 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2022: 17 - 10 147 38 49 35 2017: 19 - 27 201 24 67 50 $1,000, 2022: 13,553 - 94 71,275 17,395 (D) (D) 2017: 5,470 - 124 52,844 5,216 10,122 (D) Corn ........................................farms, 2022: - - - 16 2 11 3 2017: - - - 22 - 2 1 $1,000, 2022: - - - 7,708 (D) (D) (D) 2017: - - - 3,087 - (D) (D) Wheat .......................................farms, 2022: 2 - 4 91 32 20 12 2017: 5 - 7 120 21 33 20 $1,000, 2022: (D) - 50 27,120 10,831 8,220 3,518 2017: (D) - 74 15,897 2,890 5,008 1,247 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : Barley ......................................farms, 2022: 17 - 4 91 12 21 26 2017: 19 - 13 133 10 45 39 $1,000, 2022: (D) - 34 35,651 (D) 2,187 3,377 2017: 4,825 - 27 33,003 798 (D) 2,048 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD : : Total sales .........................................farms, 2022: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 2017: 2,289 411 585 68 312 267 340 $1,000, 2022: 829,378 114,212 1,153,031 49,051 8,481 31,092 591,747 2017: 574,757 90,320 926,720 25,861 7,328 36,437 429,916 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 358,883 286,246 2,081,283 732,111 31,066 132,306 2,083,615 2017: 251,095 219,756 1,584,136 380,308 23,487 136,469 1,264,460 : 2022 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 586 122 111 13 111 72 70 $1,000: 55 11 14 - 16 10 (D) $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 356 24 36 - 38 20 36 $1,000: 592 36 66 - (D) 38 (D) $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 308 15 21 3 29 9 30 $1,000: 1,091 57 69 11 116 30 111 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 279 16 27 - 40 16 31 $1,000: 1,855 117 196 - 295 93 205 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 196 27 40 6 17 12 20 $1,000: 2,794 382 551 71 211 178 271 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 48 13 8 - 2 10 2 $1,000: 1,062 287 180 - (D) 220 (D) $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 88 26 30 3 14 5 12 $1,000: 2,760 887 903 (D) 415 (D) 398 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 30 8 14 2 5 1 4 $1,000: 1,297 353 609 (D) 220 (D) 171 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 87 32 50 6 5 19 16 $1,000: 5,884 2,275 3,816 415 338 1,341 1,197 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 77 31 60 6 3 34 17 $1,000: 12,397 4,895 9,455 886 537 5,680 2,917 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 69 28 30 11 6 23 15 $1,000: 26,236 9,816 10,815 3,942 2,166 8,656 5,401 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 187 57 127 17 3 14 31 $1,000: 773,355 95,096 1,126,357 43,552 4,058 14,644 580,963 : 2017 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 634 127 123 18 141 56 91 $1,000: 132 25 24 (D) (D) (D) 20 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 322 3 53 2 51 15 49 $1,000: 504 5 98 (D) 87 23 80 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 313 19 43 1 33 18 38 $1,000: 1,126 68 167 (D) 114 66 135 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 295 37 44 5 27 24 32 $1,000: 2,057 270 332 35 168 162 218 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 169 28 31 3 26 25 24 $1,000: 2,368 398 438 46 390 355 314 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 43 3 5 4 4 2 10 $1,000: 959 74 107 89 92 (D) 212 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 94 17 10 2 10 18 10 $1,000: 2,954 537 316 (D) 310 538 318 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 27 7 15 3 2 4 6 $1,000: 1,140 307 678 128 (D) 182 294 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 97 49 45 3 5 31 8 $1,000: 6,698 3,194 3,231 (D) 329 2,153 608 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 73 43 57 9 7 22 25 $1,000: 11,033 7,022 9,091 1,446 (D) 3,419 3,295 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 58 40 54 9 3 32 8 $1,000: 20,776 14,156 18,537 2,622 1,211 10,132 2,798 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 164 38 105 9 3 20 39 $1,000: 525,009 64,265 893,701 21,226 3,611 19,351 421,624 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2022: 924 164 293 29 117 104 102 2017: 1,000 192 317 28 139 127 135 $1,000, 2022: 453,907 81,384 390,187 39,187 3,490 10,956 94,044 2017: 314,467 56,207 255,319 19,233 3,431 8,624 119,343 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2022: 337 91 161 15 9 14 39 2017: 316 102 159 18 19 16 41 $1,000, 2022: 98,426 36,614 132,132 13,060 (D) (D) 31,072 2017: 52,130 27,776 77,242 5,959 2,366 2,075 32,446 Corn ........................................farms, 2022: 230 2 58 5 - 2 20 2017: 217 1 41 4 - - 30 $1,000, 2022: 56,083 (D) 49,485 2,137 - (D) 19,714 2017: 28,220 (D) 19,769 791 - - 22,691 Wheat .......................................farms, 2022: 239 63 112 9 8 7 23 2017: 208 81 107 16 14 3 19 $1,000, 2022: 36,866 15,320 47,935 6,394 1,419 (D) 9,397 2017: 14,748 11,060 27,270 3,398 1,859 53 7,671 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2022: 4 - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2022: 4 - - - - - - 2017: 7 - 3 - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - 2017: 141 - 34 - - - - : Barley ......................................farms, 2022: 29 65 53 5 1 5 5 2017: 20 68 55 4 3 16 - $1,000, 2022: (D) 18,686 27,341 3,200 (D) (D) 468 2017: 266 15,404 23,167 1,770 (D) 1,976 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD : : Total sales .........................................farms, 2022: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 2017: 787 513 860 538 708 750 486 1,073 $1,000, 2022: 131,820 247,228 37,861 1,117,613 76,139 380,801 944,081 23,353 2017: 82,782 138,212 39,182 783,388 43,676 294,557 639,583 21,522 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 181,321 453,630 52,731 2,239,706 109,395 560,827 2,107,323 24,125 2017: 105,186 269,418 45,560 1,456,112 61,690 392,742 1,316,015 20,057 : 2022 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 219 191 159 106 224 131 71 373 $1,000: 14 9 15 12 29 24 11 58 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 55 34 116 29 54 88 32 190 $1,000: 86 61 179 47 93 140 62 304 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 54 26 110 26 44 77 34 114 $1,000: 204 103 414 90 161 272 125 396 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 67 33 106 44 59 69 49 120 $1,000: 459 217 727 292 431 471 343 819 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 76 26 74 39 59 55 39 65 $1,000: 1,115 358 991 564 853 769 547 928 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 25 17 14 12 9 14 5 13 $1,000: 563 362 305 261 194 321 117 282 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 55 26 22 19 48 32 12 32 $1,000: 1,726 785 717 592 1,524 1,007 388 992 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 14 16 17 9 18 18 5 6 $1,000: 626 697 752 370 812 805 220 257 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 45 38 38 41 49 40 24 25 $1,000: 3,130 2,901 2,535 2,937 3,568 2,549 1,612 1,706 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 38 49 30 52 53 28 33 16 $1,000: 5,896 7,710 5,436 8,400 8,101 4,723 5,268 2,139 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 25 21 18 30 36 41 34 7 $1,000: 8,309 7,489 6,002 11,652 12,627 14,265 12,362 2,116 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 54 68 14 92 43 86 110 7 $1,000: 109,691 226,536 19,788 1,092,394 47,746 355,455 923,025 13,357 : 2017 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 210 139 282 65 217 157 88 497 $1,000: 41 19 61 16 36 31 15 130 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 42 36 116 52 67 75 43 179 $1,000: 64 56 187 96 120 122 81 306 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 102 37 116 51 51 67 37 119 $1,000: 378 132 399 180 174 238 145 421 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 69 46 109 55 37 93 34 108 $1,000: 471 329 709 411 277 667 244 786 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 72 36 74 47 84 45 44 65 $1,000: 1,044 537 978 683 1,164 595 626 858 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 22 7 11 20 17 35 12 21 $1,000: 505 159 243 452 383 796 262 443 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 57 25 36 36 53 41 15 32 $1,000: 1,833 824 1,175 1,113 1,681 1,199 457 1,084 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 26 7 19 10 17 12 5 6 $1,000: 1,191 320 805 464 765 541 215 264 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 58 42 36 33 53 47 31 18 $1,000: 3,766 2,748 2,466 2,494 3,874 3,385 2,215 1,171 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 56 55 38 57 66 46 45 13 $1,000: 8,812 8,292 6,250 8,924 10,134 6,960 7,349 1,844 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 31 27 10 27 30 68 31 4 $1,000: 11,499 9,806 3,625 9,776 11,063 25,094 11,914 1,387 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 42 56 13 85 16 64 101 11 $1,000: 53,177 114,987 22,283 758,779 14,005 254,932 616,061 12,827 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2022: 359 241 332 240 339 369 230 399 2017: 426 280 367 272 340 431 273 471 $1,000, 2022: 37,557 228,065 22,149 135,890 49,927 216,106 201,101 19,591 2017: 25,772 117,099 15,510 72,860 23,938 172,865 121,144 17,427 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2022: 103 135 53 141 128 141 139 18 2017: 188 148 67 130 137 190 171 26 $1,000, 2022: 10,635 62,939 (D) 71,358 41,101 52,610 72,584 7,715 2017: 9,453 39,249 5,070 45,886 19,423 39,330 57,847 3,986 Corn ........................................farms, 2022: 31 4 37 116 1 35 80 - 2017: 62 - 56 115 - 34 114 - $1,000, 2022: 3,291 321 4,974 59,172 (D) 9,008 31,649 - 2017: 3,995 - 4,281 42,780 - 3,065 39,177 - Wheat .......................................farms, 2022: 52 70 33 33 111 58 54 13 2017: 94 76 26 24 126 102 58 22 $1,000, 2022: 5,063 15,974 2,482 5,120 32,383 18,369 8,419 5,676 2017: 3,190 12,757 605 1,589 14,641 20,649 (D) 2,901 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2022: - - - - - 2 - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - (D) - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - - 2017: 2 - - 4 - - 2 - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - 141 - - (D) - : Barley ......................................farms, 2022: 43 103 5 38 32 91 74 5 2017: 92 114 3 12 54 107 49 3 $1,000, 2022: (D) 46,059 (D) 6,531 (D) 24,805 27,033 291 2017: 1,193 25,559 122 671 1,087 15,578 8,313 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD : : Total sales .........................................farms, 2022: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 2017: 1,041 351 197 276 454 620 446 422 $1,000, 2022: 101,510 32,180 76,489 254,603 212,410 547,338 95,985 53,734 2017: 77,972 33,281 37,782 203,088 157,018 354,449 74,318 36,234 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 102,640 105,163 349,264 1,111,806 593,324 1,205,590 231,289 120,479 2017: 74,901 94,818 191,788 735,827 345,854 571,692 166,631 85,864 : 2022 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 460 87 71 40 62 67 121 167 $1,000: 42 9 1 (D) 14 9 8 12 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 112 18 12 17 33 39 71 20 $1,000: 188 31 23 (D) 47 69 127 32 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 64 20 7 20 16 28 24 20 $1,000: 252 72 24 71 51 100 83 65 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 87 28 9 21 17 59 33 30 $1,000: 614 165 70 133 119 420 218 221 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 61 26 7 19 24 36 19 32 $1,000: 820 339 82 271 328 528 242 461 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 14 10 3 2 6 11 10 10 $1,000: 317 215 67 (D) 133 245 224 215 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 32 20 19 5 13 5 13 28 $1,000: 1,053 604 (D) 153 379 144 422 917 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 17 8 2 - 8 13 6 11 $1,000: 736 368 (D) - 352 543 259 492 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 20 24 7 21 21 36 23 41 $1,000: 1,357 1,813 512 1,582 1,337 2,499 1,650 2,762 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 30 29 17 27 44 32 32 56 $1,000: 5,413 4,577 2,972 4,800 7,440 5,323 5,526 9,494 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 21 22 19 28 43 31 25 9 $1,000: 8,086 6,795 6,631 9,729 15,980 10,866 8,391 3,617 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 71 14 46 29 71 97 38 22 $1,000: 82,632 17,190 65,425 237,793 186,230 526,591 78,834 35,446 : 2017 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 501 101 63 53 88 93 139 116 $1,000: 101 22 (D) 6 25 20 38 4 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 118 27 14 12 44 61 52 33 $1,000: 187 43 21 19 75 89 86 50 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 91 28 4 16 28 56 41 21 $1,000: 321 99 18 62 106 208 148 76 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 102 32 13 24 50 49 27 41 $1,000: 719 205 105 167 355 339 163 289 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 52 19 10 17 23 38 28 51 $1,000: 705 300 132 230 323 579 380 698 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 12 9 5 7 12 12 10 10 $1,000: 270 194 112 153 268 266 224 218 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 15 27 6 15 27 47 13 31 $1,000: 464 821 192 458 814 1,449 418 921 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 8 7 1 8 4 7 8 11 $1,000: 351 301 (D) 359 176 327 374 515 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 27 28 10 28 38 41 16 39 $1,000: 1,854 1,983 761 2,069 2,581 3,126 1,304 2,573 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 30 31 17 46 29 73 35 37 $1,000: 5,137 5,152 2,736 6,771 4,565 12,357 5,660 5,553 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 25 26 34 13 47 43 22 9 $1,000: 9,388 9,878 12,201 4,768 16,726 15,418 7,526 3,699 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 60 16 20 37 64 100 55 23 $1,000: 58,476 14,284 21,454 188,026 131,003 320,272 57,996 21,637 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2022: 452 116 118 111 245 261 200 195 2017: 525 164 116 150 306 362 239 197 $1,000, 2022: 97,626 8,060 (D) 35,359 206,490 412,353 89,503 37,465 2017: 73,549 5,516 34,096 42,662 146,382 260,145 60,493 16,261 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2022: 151 3 87 38 142 112 105 60 2017: 151 2 83 65 157 195 108 68 $1,000, 2022: 76,719 149 60,813 (D) 45,049 (D) 83,125 (D) 2017: 51,934 (D) 24,974 12,739 42,352 (D) 53,585 4,748 Corn ........................................farms, 2022: - - 1 12 7 17 - 5 2017: - - - 42 10 28 - 1 $1,000, 2022: - - (D) 2,972 (D) 19,347 - (D) 2017: - - - 7,094 1,510 7,276 - (D) Wheat .......................................farms, 2022: 130 - 78 18 110 37 98 47 2017: 130 - 69 29 110 103 104 50 $1,000, 2022: 54,504 - 45,178 4,051 24,458 31,264 59,685 8,559 2017: 27,605 - 13,119 4,148 21,421 14,346 30,283 4,234 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - - 2017: 1 - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Barley ......................................farms, 2022: 41 3 27 19 78 85 20 3 2017: 25 2 20 18 92 129 28 22 $1,000, 2022: (D) 149 (D) 2,700 19,214 34,842 2,490 50 2017: (D) (D) 700 1,273 18,763 26,711 1,332 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD : : Total sales .........................................farms, 2022: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 2017: 565 640 295 48 277 1,211 188 535 $1,000, 2022: 463,023 313,664 360,522 222 62,626 1,135,933 12,423 61,610 2017: 273,377 167,400 235,442 215 45,339 680,238 10,541 50,246 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 1,004,388 546,453 1,306,241 5,053 233,680 971,714 87,487 124,465 2017: 483,852 261,562 798,108 4,489 163,679 561,716 56,069 93,918 : 2022 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 73 108 108 23 93 248 52 102 $1,000: 9 17 4 6 9 11 9 11 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 34 70 9 - 15 84 9 52 $1,000: 52 115 12 - 25 146 13 95 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 40 71 12 6 9 99 20 56 $1,000: 145 244 45 21 34 372 71 206 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 37 74 11 9 30 108 8 39 $1,000: 254 512 97 55 207 763 51 292 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 41 49 16 3 13 81 3 40 $1,000: 570 706 205 48 186 1,178 40 517 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 12 17 5 - 3 15 - 14 $1,000: 272 371 110 - 62 334 - 304 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 21 26 12 3 18 70 13 28 $1,000: 679 806 417 92 633 2,162 391 952 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 13 17 7 - 6 33 3 8 $1,000: 579 775 301 - 269 1,479 132 369 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 40 35 14 - 19 75 15 51 $1,000: 2,797 2,308 975 - 1,458 5,430 1,018 3,909 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 32 27 16 - 22 95 8 44 $1,000: 4,866 4,416 2,435 - 3,496 16,111 1,133 6,538 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 49 26 12 - 16 88 6 33 $1,000: 17,791 9,016 4,300 - 5,458 32,383 1,803 11,257 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 69 54 54 - 24 173 5 28 $1,000: 435,010 294,380 351,620 - 50,790 1,075,564 7,762 37,159 : 2017 value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ......................................farms: 85 154 114 25 69 199 66 152 $1,000: 17 41 (D) 9 13 30 2 34 $1,000 to $2,499 ......................................farms: 52 81 11 4 22 141 12 53 $1,000: 85 146 19 (D) 38 229 20 91 $2,500 to $4,999 ......................................farms: 44 91 4 3 19 108 19 53 $1,000: 150 312 (D) 10 66 391 65 176 $5,000 to $9,999 ......................................farms: 48 62 15 9 23 95 16 48 $1,000: 320 419 103 65 163 661 109 330 : $10,000 to $19,999 ....................................farms: 52 64 18 3 26 76 20 29 $1,000: 791 943 244 32 420 1,066 279 429 $20,000 to $24,999 ....................................farms: 30 28 1 3 5 22 5 10 $1,000: 663 628 (D) 68 107 489 111 217 $25,000 to $39,999 ....................................farms: 22 26 15 1 19 74 13 30 $1,000: 685 871 492 (D) 536 2,365 425 905 $40,000 to $49,999 ....................................farms: 10 4 6 - 13 23 8 14 $1,000: 443 179 279 - 567 1,011 348 616 : $50,000 to $99,999 ....................................farms: 31 17 10 - 20 115 14 44 $1,000: 2,128 1,230 707 - 1,306 8,273 1,069 3,093 $100,000 to $249,999 ..................................farms: 62 39 30 - 28 138 7 58 $1,000: 10,007 6,170 5,139 - 4,766 22,188 1,257 9,780 $250,000 to $499,999 ..................................farms: 66 27 20 - 19 100 4 24 $1,000: 22,873 8,783 7,008 - 6,928 35,278 1,512 8,772 $500,000 or more ......................................farms: 63 47 51 - 14 120 4 20 $1,000: 235,215 147,679 221,411 - 30,430 608,257 5,344 25,802 : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops ...............................farms, 2022: 204 290 114 11 139 563 36 243 2017: 285 285 135 21 165 705 51 303 $1,000, 2022: 98,692 81,867 299,477 85 57,258 279,269 1,685 39,570 2017: 61,775 50,198 210,861 65 40,979 168,671 922 20,991 Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas .....................................farms, 2022: 96 88 71 - 51 325 5 48 2017: 119 98 90 - 71 445 2 74 $1,000, 2022: (D) 19,038 83,460 - 16,350 123,460 (D) 11,257 2017: 25,538 11,427 53,582 - 13,351 79,933 (D) 5,652 Corn ........................................farms, 2022: 73 62 10 - 2 192 - 30 2017: 94 66 19 - - 312 - 33 $1,000, 2022: 23,415 11,270 8,434 - (D) 63,197 - 5,016 2017: 18,542 7,305 10,506 - - 40,859 - 2,451 Wheat .......................................farms, 2022: 47 60 68 - 12 160 - 33 2017: 57 69 85 - 19 180 - 58 $1,000, 2022: 8,804 7,220 67,173 - 4,248 18,797 - 5,265 2017: 4,460 2,972 39,995 - 1,506 9,863 - 2,030 Soybeans ....................................farms, 2022: - - - - - 1 - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - (D) - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Sorghum .....................................farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - - 2017: 1 - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - - : Barley ......................................farms, 2022: - 3 10 - 49 150 - 10 2017: 6 2 15 - 69 170 - 18 $1,000, 2022: - 49 3,106 - 11,400 32,264 - 296 2017: (D) (D) 1,076 - 11,215 12,818 - 218 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas - Con. : : Rice ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2022: 771 6 - 2 2 14 9 2017: 1,158 14 - 13 4 29 9 $1,000, 2022: 126,961 342 - (D) (D) 3,261 (D) 2017: 124,410 693 - (D) 57 3,164 372 : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2022: 1,231 54 3 57 7 5 76 2017: 1,355 70 5 14 - 7 108 $1,000, 2022: 1,597,035 8,934 12 8,430 32 (D) 230,604 2017: 1,147,097 4,400 (D) (D) - 80 198,694 Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ................farms, 2022: 561 38 7 32 - 7 12 2017: 532 34 6 11 1 9 18 $1,000, 2022: 31,693 531 47 (D) - (D) 136 2017: 25,122 364 25 (D) (D) (D) 69 Fruits and tree nuts ........................farms, 2022: 446 31 6 26 - 6 9 2017: 413 31 6 8 - 9 11 $1,000, 2022: 29,683 326 (D) 242 - 3 (D) 2017: 24,111 312 13 (D) - (D) 60 Berries .....................................farms, 2022: 234 21 2 11 - 4 5 2017: 220 14 5 5 1 9 10 $1,000, 2022: 2,010 205 (D) (D) - (D) (D) 2017: 1,011 52 12 12 (D) 6 9 : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ..........................................farms, 2022: 599 50 2 40 3 7 17 2017: 491 63 2 10 2 3 16 $1,000, 2022: 122,254 9,523 (D) (D) (D) 11 771 2017: 66,449 7,747 (D) 553 (D) (D) 589 Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .........................farms, 2022: 47 - - 1 - 6 - 2017: 52 4 - - - 1 - $1,000, 2022: 673 - - (D) - (D) - 2017: 707 (Z) - - - (D) - Cultivated Christmas trees ..................farms, 2022: 47 - - 1 - 6 - 2017: 50 4 - - - 1 - $1,000, 2022: 673 - - (D) - (D) - 2017: (D) (Z) - - - (D) - Short rotation woody crops ..................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: 2 - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - Other crops and hay ...........................farms, 2022: 7,813 370 71 259 175 75 339 2017: 9,671 469 100 234 179 113 398 $1,000, 2022: 1,386,308 8,126 2,600 11,361 9,032 6,706 98,032 2017: 922,356 16,013 3,034 7,288 12,978 7,568 72,881 Maple syrup .................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2022: 10,666 555 111 432 190 68 590 2017: 12,305 628 113 390 256 87 738 $1,000, 2022: 6,127,408 151,990 12,812 13,026 16,928 459 99,604 2017: 4,356,606 88,786 9,401 16,341 19,023 647 100,822 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2022: 1,751 130 13 88 13 19 83 2017: 1,990 164 7 47 18 18 99 $1,000, 2022: 40,298 193 (D) 121 16 44 (D) 2017: 29,828 90 2 27 9 14 181 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2022: 7,630 364 87 287 168 41 454 2017: 8,757 421 98 291 222 52 535 $1,000, 2022: 2,175,548 33,162 12,668 11,683 13,697 374 62,992 2017: 1,787,255 25,442 9,234 12,812 14,365 (D) 72,379 Milk from cows ................................farms, 2022: 330 10 - 4 9 - 17 2017: 491 15 - 7 23 - 23 $1,000, 2022: 3,727,378 113,396 - (D) 2,197 - 28,757 2017: 2,330,865 61,489 - 2,909 3,830 - 22,831 Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 663 30 - 24 4 7 27 2017: 699 21 2 23 10 7 35 $1,000, 2022: 23,779 (D) - (D) 2 13 267 2017: 18,100 (D) (D) 13 3 11 (D) : Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk .........................................farms, 2022: 1,454 84 17 45 16 7 65 2017: 1,784 94 11 35 29 20 88 $1,000, 2022: 46,709 272 128 150 (D) (D) 3,067 2017: 42,708 172 57 133 484 46 2,041 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas - Con. : : Rice ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2022: - - 4 12 28 - 2 2017: 2 - 9 11 14 4 3 $1,000, 2022: - - 11 795 4,900 - (D) 2017: (D) - 24 856 1,527 (D) 122 : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2022: 9 - 42 59 10 5 3 2017: 4 - 84 40 15 8 5 $1,000, 2022: 3,636 - 454 75,682 43 (D) 4 2017: (D) - 464 45,227 136 (D) (D) Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ................farms, 2022: 1 - 31 15 16 - - 2017: 1 3 72 12 12 - 1 $1,000, 2022: (D) - 318 (D) 140 - - 2017: (D) 36 318 (D) 54 - (D) Fruits and tree nuts ........................farms, 2022: 1 - 21 11 11 - - 2017: 1 3 40 9 10 - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - 88 131 73 - - 2017: (D) 36 97 68 (D) - - Berries .....................................farms, 2022: - - 21 7 8 - - 2017: - - 45 4 3 - 1 $1,000, 2022: - - 230 (D) 68 - - 2017: - - 221 (D) (D) - (D) : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ..........................................farms, 2022: 6 7 35 26 29 6 1 2017: 11 3 61 25 34 1 6 $1,000, 2022: (D) 4,830 5,415 6,893 8,943 119 (D) 2017: (D) (D) 2,112 3,162 5,616 (D) (D) Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .........................farms, 2022: - - 7 7 - - - 2017: - 1 14 1 4 - - $1,000, 2022: - - 436 (D) - - - 2017: - (D) 574 (D) 6 - - Cultivated Christmas trees ..................farms, 2022: - - 7 7 - - - 2017: - 1 14 1 4 - - $1,000, 2022: - - 436 (D) - - - 2017: - (D) 574 (D) 6 - - Short rotation woody crops ..................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Other crops and hay ...........................farms, 2022: 97 13 243 283 126 85 66 2017: 100 33 418 371 153 132 100 $1,000, 2022: 30,917 46 3,616 27,291 18,294 39,869 16,772 2017: 9,611 (D) 2,549 9,465 15,899 20,541 14,852 Maple syrup .................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2022: 101 59 393 349 143 63 39 2017: 79 48 476 464 159 73 41 $1,000, 2022: 16,507 2,455 4,376 74,733 4,096 (D) 5,114 2017: 10,483 1,039 4,054 57,029 3,874 6,512 4,217 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2022: 16 8 145 57 41 2 8 2017: 7 11 228 98 30 9 8 $1,000, 2022: 22 (D) 246 (D) 69 (D) 11 2017: 3 6 181 (D) 26 3 5 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2022: 66 50 167 219 92 57 27 2017: 55 37 151 265 103 61 33 $1,000, 2022: 15,101 2,293 1,816 70,800 (D) (D) (D) 2017: 6,977 994 2,201 54,218 2,659 5,327 4,194 Milk from cows ................................farms, 2022: - - 7 4 2 - - 2017: - - 6 4 2 1 - $1,000, 2022: - - 552 2,618 (D) - - 2017: - - 192 1,284 (D) (D) - Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 2 - 77 35 15 3 5 2017: 4 - 79 35 28 4 1 $1,000, 2022: (D) - (D) (D) 43 10 5 2017: 5 - (D) (D) 81 (D) (D) : Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk .........................................farms, 2022: 18 9 79 75 21 3 3 2017: 14 3 117 79 28 7 3 $1,000, 2022: 935 54 189 191 52 (D) (D) 2017: (D) (D) 152 188 477 132 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas - Con. : : Rice ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2022: 59 25 37 3 4 - 12 2017: 134 18 51 - 11 3 12 $1,000, 2022: 4,707 (D) 7,371 1,329 (D) - 1,493 2017: 8,755 (D) 7,003 - (D) 46 2,084 : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2022: 190 24 40 - 7 1 9 2017: 200 11 38 3 19 2 17 $1,000, 2022: 138,700 35,803 (D) - 35 (D) 24,330 2017: 93,300 22,554 104,651 486 (D) (D) 39,749 Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ................farms, 2022: 87 1 3 - 4 2 3 2017: 80 - 1 - 1 - 4 $1,000, 2022: 23,978 (D) 12 - 22 (D) 54 2017: (D) - (D) - (D) - (D) Fruits and tree nuts ........................farms, 2022: 80 1 - - 4 2 2 2017: 71 - - - 1 - 3 $1,000, 2022: 23,330 (D) - - (D) (D) (D) 2017: (D) - - - (D) - 65 Berries .....................................farms, 2022: 22 - 3 - 2 - 1 2017: 12 - 1 - - - 1 $1,000, 2022: 648 - 12 - (D) - (D) 2017: 212 - (D) - - - (D) : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ..........................................farms, 2022: 72 8 8 - 3 1 - 2017: 39 2 7 - 2 7 1 $1,000, 2022: 16,199 (D) (D) - (D) (D) - 2017: (D) (D) (D) - (D) (D) (D) Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .........................farms, 2022: - - - - 6 - - 2017: 2 - 2 - 5 - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - 10 - - 2017: (D) - (D) - 10 - - Cultivated Christmas trees ..................farms, 2022: - - - - 6 - - 2017: - - 2 - 5 - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - 10 - - 2017: - - (D) - 10 - - Short rotation woody crops ..................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: 2 - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - Other crops and hay ...........................farms, 2022: 670 108 233 28 99 102 87 2017: 772 128 270 26 105 116 115 $1,000, 2022: 176,604 8,923 133,982 26,127 1,674 10,382 38,588 2017: 142,219 (D) 72,369 12,788 717 6,518 47,029 Maple syrup .................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2022: 1,212 200 255 40 104 126 161 2017: 1,221 201 301 34 112 164 200 $1,000, 2022: 375,471 32,828 762,844 9,864 4,991 20,136 497,702 2017: 260,290 34,113 671,401 6,628 3,897 27,813 310,574 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2022: 268 25 14 1 14 12 33 2017: 235 31 24 - 23 2 45 $1,000, 2022: 2,801 34 (D) (D) (D) (D) 77 2017: 2,079 (D) (D) - 928 (D) 53 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2022: 784 163 223 34 69 92 101 2017: 813 157 243 32 80 133 131 $1,000, 2022: 82,217 20,844 330,430 8,314 (D) 16,836 (D) 2017: 66,024 26,877 401,873 (D) (D) 23,463 (D) Milk from cows ................................farms, 2022: 28 2 25 - - - 6 2017: 48 5 28 - 1 7 6 $1,000, 2022: 279,233 (D) 393,469 - - - (D) 2017: 180,029 3,856 234,085 - (D) 2,298 103,608 Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 81 5 7 1 12 14 8 2017: 56 3 12 - 8 6 6 $1,000, 2022: (D) 48 (D) (D) 10 309 14 2017: (D) (D) (D) - 4 (D) (D) : Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk .........................................farms, 2022: 219 19 17 2 17 7 29 2017: 270 22 28 2 4 22 19 $1,000, 2022: 3,764 127 2,008 (D) 54 92 173 2017: 3,497 262 2,072 (D) 5 148 104 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas - Con. : : Rice ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2022: 12 8 2 6 56 7 27 13 2017: 55 13 9 13 45 8 46 10 $1,000, 2022: 1,481 586 (D) 535 7,094 (D) 5,483 1,747 2017: (D) 933 61 705 3,696 38 6,329 (D) : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2022: 11 56 38 27 5 30 27 34 2017: 8 71 38 15 6 41 29 37 $1,000, 2022: (D) 146,612 2,605 19,298 40 90,707 (D) 377 2017: (D) 71,317 526 13,059 (D) 97,138 (D) 557 Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ................farms, 2022: 17 5 61 8 19 14 1 42 2017: 11 2 38 7 6 12 10 41 $1,000, 2022: 70 31 1,416 (D) 68 120 (D) 392 2017: 35 (D) (D) (D) 39 (D) 82 222 Fruits and tree nuts ........................farms, 2022: 16 2 54 7 18 9 1 32 2017: 7 1 30 7 6 9 8 34 $1,000, 2022: 51 (D) 1,307 50 54 82 (D) 105 2017: 32 (D) (D) 21 34 17 (D) 98 Berries .....................................farms, 2022: 6 4 18 1 4 9 - 24 2017: 5 1 14 3 4 7 2 20 $1,000, 2022: 19 (D) 109 (D) 14 38 - 287 2017: 3 (D) 32 (D) 5 (D) (D) 125 : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ..........................................farms, 2022: 8 11 17 1 5 16 4 38 2017: 6 5 6 1 5 8 9 35 $1,000, 2022: (D) 274 (D) (D) 35 199 (D) 1,172 2017: (D) (D) (D) (D) 33 500 (D) 2,961 Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 13 2017: - - - - 1 2 - 4 $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 119 2017: - - - - (D) (D) - 47 Cultivated Christmas trees ..................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 13 2017: - - - - 1 2 - 4 $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - 119 2017: - - - - (D) (D) - 47 Short rotation woody crops ..................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Other crops and hay ...........................farms, 2022: 291 154 230 150 252 306 179 299 2017: 364 193 293 217 263 339 206 379 $1,000, 2022: 19,334 18,209 6,669 45,177 8,683 72,470 78,604 9,816 2017: 12,461 6,429 6,017 13,886 4,421 35,875 31,394 9,654 Maple syrup .................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2022: 329 200 366 263 324 355 242 386 2017: 408 216 442 351 384 372 236 462 $1,000, 2022: 94,264 19,163 15,711 981,724 26,212 164,696 742,980 3,762 2017: 57,010 21,113 23,672 710,529 19,738 121,692 518,440 4,094 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2022: 30 30 71 13 41 42 22 113 2017: 38 25 72 21 51 41 31 161 $1,000, 2022: (D) 37 (D) (D) 711 51 (D) 177 2017: (D) 11 46 (D) 32 14 15 80 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2022: 235 165 263 216 253 259 205 186 2017: 313 158 327 280 321 287 197 227 $1,000, 2022: (D) 16,421 11,398 145,387 (D) 74,534 220,436 2,262 2017: 11,372 14,780 10,824 70,150 14,249 69,719 242,741 2,429 Milk from cows ................................farms, 2022: 36 1 4 36 2 15 25 5 2017: 56 3 6 43 5 20 39 2 $1,000, 2022: 62,449 (D) 2,582 824,839 (D) 84,937 519,029 (D) 2017: 35,114 3,194 (D) 620,327 (D) 49,776 274,290 (D) Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 29 6 23 4 11 31 8 56 2017: 29 22 27 12 13 37 9 51 $1,000, 2022: 82 2 49 2 240 58 17 145 2017: (D) 10 (D) (D) (D) 67 6 73 : Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk .........................................farms, 2022: 34 20 54 25 23 51 30 54 2017: 22 21 83 56 21 38 34 100 $1,000, 2022: 1,391 (D) 1,360 2,870 206 4,612 (D) 225 2017: 116 (D) 1,877 4,130 217 (D) (D) 286 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas - Con. : : Rice ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2022: 95 - 52 4 3 20 75 18 2017: 115 - 54 5 13 34 90 25 $1,000, 2022: 18,987 - 12,448 (D) (D) (D) 20,951 2,751 2017: 23,257 - 11,155 224 658 (D) 21,970 285 : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2022: 32 16 - 2 83 35 9 3 2017: 18 15 - 4 101 64 17 1 $1,000, 2022: 850 52 - (D) 146,070 172,855 49 (D) 2017: 224 (D) - (D) 96,497 102,283 45 (D) Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ................farms, 2022: 29 9 1 - 12 1 15 2 2017: 24 15 2 - 10 3 19 7 $1,000, 2022: (D) 75 (D) - 107 (D) 212 (D) 2017: 113 109 (D) - 48 (D) 315 (D) Fruits and tree nuts ........................farms, 2022: 19 5 1 - 5 1 14 1 2017: 15 14 1 - 7 3 17 3 $1,000, 2022: 142 64 (D) - 64 (D) 196 (D) 2017: 105 38 (D) - 42 (D) 305 (D) Berries .....................................farms, 2022: 17 5 - - 10 1 3 1 2017: 12 4 1 - 4 1 6 6 $1,000, 2022: (D) 11 - - 44 (D) 16 (D) 2017: 8 71 (D) - 5 (D) 10 57 : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ..........................................farms, 2022: 47 3 1 2 24 5 5 5 2017: 30 3 2 1 11 9 7 5 $1,000, 2022: 4,627 110 (D) (D) 3,224 (D) 61 5 2017: 3,149 34 (D) (D) 697 (D) 2,326 1,288 Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .........................farms, 2022: 5 - - - - - - - 2017: 8 - - - - - 3 - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: 23 - - - - - (Z) - Cultivated Christmas trees ..................farms, 2022: 5 - - - - - - - 2017: 8 - - - - - 3 - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: 23 - - - - - (Z) - Short rotation woody crops ..................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Other crops and hay ...........................farms, 2022: 285 101 71 103 117 236 97 161 2017: 385 142 85 139 194 304 142 158 $1,000, 2022: 15,176 7,674 (D) 22,240 12,040 131,651 6,055 16,147 2017: 18,106 5,284 (D) 24,036 6,789 99,137 4,221 10,162 Maple syrup .................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2022: 239 181 64 137 124 229 159 177 2017: 325 223 58 164 194 297 211 221 $1,000, 2022: 3,885 24,120 (D) 219,244 5,920 134,985 6,482 16,269 2017: 4,422 27,765 3,686 160,427 10,636 94,304 13,825 19,973 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2022: 60 28 5 10 13 19 21 22 2017: 92 29 4 17 27 13 27 16 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 5 20 11 25 30 (D) 2017: (D) 13 (D) (D) (D) (D) 13 (D) Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2022: 112 141 59 117 93 185 118 143 2017: 147 171 54 147 148 236 146 186 $1,000, 2022: 1,776 22,989 (D) 33,028 (D) 20,739 (D) 14,573 2017: 2,451 25,112 (D) 30,391 9,267 12,809 12,963 12,291 Milk from cows ................................farms, 2022: 4 - - 15 2 10 - 1 2017: 5 2 - 16 3 15 2 - $1,000, 2022: 17 - - 186,004 (D) 98,910 - (D) 2017: 804 (D) - 129,568 641 63,570 (D) - Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 23 9 2 2 5 12 4 11 2017: 34 1 - 4 10 9 4 7 $1,000, 2022: (D) 11 (D) (D) (D) (D) 181 25 2017: (D) (D) - 19 181 9 (D) (D) : Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk .........................................farms, 2022: 61 23 4 14 9 39 23 20 2017: 74 29 3 31 10 50 38 11 $1,000, 2022: 119 92 (D) (D) 25 (D) 76 166 2017: 170 68 (D) 363 40 (D) 68 61 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Crops, including nursery and : greenhouse crops - Con. : Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and : dry peas - Con. : : Rice ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Other grains, oilseeds, dry beans, : and dry peas ...............................farms, 2022: 22 8 9 - 3 98 5 9 2017: 20 20 11 - 9 211 2 9 $1,000, 2022: 2,034 499 4,746 - (D) (D) (D) 681 2017: 2,146 (D) 2,006 - 630 16,392 (D) 953 : Tobacco .......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Cotton and cottonseed .........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Vegetables, melons, potatoes, and sweet : potatoes .....................................farms, 2022: 16 62 27 2 19 78 5 13 2017: 24 45 39 9 22 75 3 23 $1,000, 2022: (D) 23,575 172,648 (D) 18,964 52,123 (D) 11,065 2017: 4,265 18,660 129,249 (D) 16,659 34,410 32 4,882 Fruits, tree nuts, and berries ................farms, 2022: 2 32 - 4 2 17 - 9 2017: 8 22 - 2 2 21 - 4 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) - 8 (D) 432 - (D) 2017: (D) (D) - (D) (D) (D) - 155 Fruits and tree nuts ........................farms, 2022: 2 24 - 4 1 14 - 5 2017: 8 19 - 2 2 14 - 3 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) - (D) (D) 407 - 359 2017: 61 2,199 - (D) (D) (D) - (D) Berries .....................................farms, 2022: - 10 - 2 1 6 - 5 2017: 2 4 - 1 - 10 - 2 $1,000, 2022: - 25 - (D) (D) 25 - (D) 2017: (D) (D) - (D) - 25 - (D) : Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and : sod ..........................................farms, 2022: 2 8 6 3 34 25 7 1 2017: 2 1 2 3 14 19 7 5 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 598 (D) (D) 10,465 (D) (D) 2017: (D) (D) (D) 20 (D) (D) (D) 21 Cultivated Christmas trees and short : rotation woody crops .........................farms, 2022: 2 - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Cultivated Christmas trees ..................farms, 2022: 2 - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Short rotation woody crops ..................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - Other crops and hay ...........................farms, 2022: 163 233 75 8 88 436 30 219 2017: 230 228 88 17 123 525 43 282 $1,000, 2022: 39,555 36,246 42,772 (D) 6,305 92,790 (D) 16,812 2017: 31,897 17,890 (D) 28 7,445 51,308 530 10,280 Maple syrup .................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Livestock, poultry, and their products ..........farms, 2022: 275 304 87 20 96 572 82 264 2017: 356 346 100 23 134 653 103 241 $1,000, 2022: 364,331 231,798 61,045 137 5,368 856,664 10,738 22,040 2017: 211,601 117,202 24,581 150 4,360 511,567 9,619 29,255 Poultry and eggs ..............................farms, 2022: 20 47 3 10 27 71 15 28 2017: 26 64 7 5 17 59 4 39 $1,000, 2022: 19 361 5 (D) 79 (D) (D) 44 2017: (D) 284 5 2 19 34 1 80 Cattle and calves .............................farms, 2022: 235 230 72 6 75 461 54 202 2017: 291 265 74 13 91 515 82 168 $1,000, 2022: 216,594 126,680 39,976 61 (D) 130,219 10,261 20,358 2017: 115,729 60,688 20,867 88 3,177 64,955 (D) 27,333 Milk from cows ................................farms, 2022: 8 9 2 - 3 37 - 1 2017: 17 17 1 3 8 51 1 - $1,000, 2022: 143,564 102,906 (D) - 14 675,603 - (D) 2017: 94,081 53,508 (D) 12 870 372,868 (D) - Hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 7 9 - - 8 33 3 10 2017: 13 35 - 4 9 16 5 8 $1,000, 2022: 16 (D) - - 79 (D) (D) (D) 2017: 54 (D) - (D) (D) (D) 13 15 : Sheep, goats, wool, mohair, and : milk .........................................farms, 2022: 37 49 3 4 13 72 5 35 2017: 48 49 1 - 18 99 6 47 $1,000, 2022: 2,791 193 19 27 47 1,709 4 810 2017: 797 626 (D) - 139 1,677 28 1,019 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Livestock, poultry, and their products - Con. : : Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2022: 1,028 59 3 48 16 9 55 2017: 1,495 68 10 68 34 9 130 $1,000, 2022: 12,951 1,004 (D) 551 (D) 17 598 2017: 12,504 (D) 105 419 326 61 1,423 Aquaculture ...................................farms, 2022: 51 1 - 1 - - 4 2017: 69 1 1 - - - 1 $1,000, 2022: 76,464 (D) - (D) - - (D) 2017: 97,817 (D) (D) - - - (D) Other animals and other animal : products .....................................farms, 2022: 585 27 3 25 6 4 26 2017: 582 30 3 23 5 3 29 $1,000, 2022: 24,281 2,710 (Z) (D) (D) (D) 2,625 2017: 37,530 238 (D) 29 7 (D) 1,167 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to : consumers ..........................................farms, 2022: 1,499 139 8 74 10 13 61 2017: 1,765 174 8 42 15 20 84 $1,000, 2022: 20,984 1,933 117 643 40 97 294 2017: 28,001 1,304 24 199 184 63 215 : Value of food sold directly to retail markets, : institutions, and food hubs for local or regionally : branded products ...................................farms, 2022: 638 24 4 20 8 2 40 2017: 281 22 - 1 1 2 16 $1,000, 2022: 57,669 1,543 (D) 546 135 (D) 14,653 2017: 85,547 556 - (D) (D) (D) 10,320 : VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS SOLD : : Value of processed or value-added agricultural : products sold ......................................farms, 2022: 432 39 1 13 5 6 11 2017: 365 22 4 13 - 4 5 $1,000, 2022: 13,950 1,358 (D) 284 13 10 (D) 2017: 13,479 215 2 (D) - 19 5 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Livestock, poultry, and their products - Con. : : Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2022: 18 10 47 39 3 4 4 2017: 17 2 51 86 15 12 2 $1,000, 2022: 220 42 551 533 5 35 5 2017: 181 (D) 396 538 64 (D) (D) Aquaculture ...................................farms, 2022: 1 - 1 - 1 - - 2017: 1 - 3 - 1 - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - (D) - (D) - - 2017: (D) - (D) - (D) - - Other animals and other animal : products .....................................farms, 2022: 7 7 41 31 5 1 - 2017: 8 3 54 39 13 2 - $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 450 433 53 (D) - 2017: (D) (D) 479 702 74 (D) - : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to : consumers ..........................................farms, 2022: 12 12 103 48 26 5 9 2017: 5 6 161 77 39 8 10 $1,000, 2022: 127 48 550 459 82 (D) 25 2017: 115 45 755 151 122 18 69 : Value of food sold directly to retail markets, : institutions, and food hubs for local or regionally : branded products ...................................farms, 2022: 11 - 29 10 18 6 8 2017: 5 - 27 2 14 - 1 $1,000, 2022: 221 - 642 1,047 589 543 84 2017: 51 - 195 (D) 609 - (D) : VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS SOLD : : Value of processed or value-added agricultural : products sold ......................................farms, 2022: 4 5 43 6 12 - 3 2017: 5 1 47 14 14 - 1 $1,000, 2022: (D) 32 655 9 58 - 1 2017: 111 (D) 307 68 642 - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Livestock, poultry, and their products - Con. : : Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2022: 103 21 18 3 4 23 22 2017: 166 24 21 2 5 22 21 $1,000, 2022: 1,343 160 200 (D) 13 318 157 2017: 1,582 256 130 (D) 18 99 (D) Aquaculture ...................................farms, 2022: 1 5 - - 1 3 - 2017: 1 5 - - 1 3 - $1,000, 2022: (D) 4,165 - - (D) 2,535 - 2017: (D) 976 - - (D) 1,776 - Other animals and other animal : products .....................................farms, 2022: 61 7 7 3 7 6 16 2017: 40 7 10 1 3 5 18 $1,000, 2022: 4,657 (D) (D) (D) 3 (D) (D) 2017: 6,283 1,870 (D) (D) (Z) 19 (D) : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to : consumers ..........................................farms, 2022: 210 28 16 - 17 8 23 2017: 224 22 22 - 13 11 48 $1,000, 2022: 5,050 369 231 - 48 65 161 2017: 2,199 (D) 1,830 - 40 (D) 5,897 : Value of food sold directly to retail markets, : institutions, and food hubs for local or regionally : branded products ...................................farms, 2022: 93 13 11 - 1 - 8 2017: 33 3 3 - - 1 4 $1,000, 2022: 10,662 2,897 2,234 - (D) - 104 2017: 2,477 539 (D) - - (D) 18 : VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS SOLD : : Value of processed or value-added agricultural : products sold ......................................farms, 2022: 63 2 2 - 2 6 7 2017: 56 1 2 - 3 4 7 $1,000, 2022: 4,411 (D) (D) - (D) 29 42 2017: 2,945 (D) (D) - (Z) (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Livestock, poultry, and their products - Con. : : Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2022: 42 14 33 13 28 55 9 50 2017: 66 35 59 21 38 45 13 40 $1,000, 2022: 354 (D) 217 (D) 210 455 87 873 2017: 467 (D) 302 205 645 196 (D) 484 Aquaculture ...................................farms, 2022: 1 1 - 8 5 - - 1 2017: 2 2 - 15 5 - - 1 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) - 7,446 8,683 - - (D) 2017: (D) (D) - 14,187 2,775 - - (D) Other animals and other animal : products .....................................farms, 2022: 20 8 21 9 11 20 5 29 2017: 38 8 20 13 7 7 8 29 $1,000, 2022: 2,260 (D) (D) 744 293 48 (D) 52 2017: 3,480 (D) 25 1,416 341 (D) 896 (D) : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to : consumers ..........................................farms, 2022: 31 30 88 6 28 42 19 95 2017: 19 17 80 30 32 33 14 151 $1,000, 2022: 245 765 737 44 132 (D) 78 632 2017: 68 549 362 113 163 (D) 26 405 : Value of food sold directly to retail markets, : institutions, and food hubs for local or regionally : branded products ...................................farms, 2022: 7 12 27 12 8 18 12 8 2017: 5 2 3 13 4 10 4 16 $1,000, 2022: 67 2,806 1,358 318 13 (D) 96 38 2017: 3,171 (D) (D) 1,678 1 1,566 13 38 : VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS SOLD : : Value of processed or value-added agricultural : products sold ......................................farms, 2022: 6 8 19 6 4 6 - 36 2017: 3 1 8 7 5 5 3 35 $1,000, 2022: 71 119 285 39 26 70 - 130 2017: (D) (D) 10 (D) 20 15 6 365 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 2. Market Value of Agricultural Products Sold Including Food Marketing Practices and Value-Added Products: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Livestock, poultry, and their products - Con. : : Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2022: 20 20 2 13 9 26 12 22 2017: 49 32 2 20 32 13 36 29 $1,000, 2022: 220 603 (D) 42 169 128 86 (D) 2017: 209 297 (D) 63 311 91 191 113 Aquaculture ...................................farms, 2022: - 1 - - - - 3 - 2017: - 2 - - - - 3 - $1,000, 2022: - (D) - - - - 431 - 2017: - (D) - - - - 411 - Other animals and other animal : products .....................................farms, 2022: 25 5 2 2 11 8 2 13 2017: 21 14 - 3 6 6 13 21 $1,000, 2022: 182 15 (D) (D) 311 (D) (D) (D) 2017: 154 2,151 - (D) (D) (D) (D) 7,487 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to : consumers ..........................................farms, 2022: 46 18 3 8 18 7 27 25 2017: 72 29 4 6 14 15 34 12 $1,000, 2022: 785 119 9 54 22 11 146 33 2017: 218 104 11 104 85 213 2,134 107 : Value of food sold directly to retail markets, : institutions, and food hubs for local or regionally : branded products ...................................farms, 2022: 36 13 1 15 16 7 17 4 2017: 26 5 - 2 5 3 5 4 $1,000, 2022: 342 557 (D) 78 5,757 244 325 17 2017: 45 2,586 - (D) 859 (D) 232 44 : VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS SOLD : : Value of processed or value-added agricultural : products sold ......................................farms, 2022: 23 13 1 2 1 6 8 3 2017: 18 11 1 2 - - 5 5 $1,000, 2022: 336 146 (D) (D) (D) 3 114 11 2017: 19 251 (D) (D) - - 2,255 4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MARKET VALUE OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS : SOLD - Con. : : Total sales - Con. : Value of sales by commodity or commodity group: - Con. : Livestock, poultry, and their products - Con. : : Horses, ponies, mules, burros, and : donkeys ......................................farms, 2022: 24 31 8 3 10 49 6 20 2017: 34 39 23 3 17 43 10 31 $1,000, 2022: (D) 231 272 15 (D) 717 24 490 2017: 457 428 (D) 20 54 205 43 544 Aquaculture ...................................farms, 2022: - 1 1 - - 9 1 - 2017: 1 4 2 - - 12 2 - $1,000, 2022: - (D) (D) - - 45,624 (D) - 2017: (D) 2 (D) - - 70,376 (D) - Other animals and other animal : products .....................................farms, 2022: 12 14 10 7 6 32 12 11 2017: 14 12 7 3 6 15 9 6 $1,000, 2022: (D) 1,414 9 (D) (D) (D) 9 311 2017: 474 (D) 297 (D) (D) (D) 62 263 : FOOD MARKETING PRACTICES : : Value of food sold directly to : consumers ..........................................farms, 2022: 17 41 2 9 18 62 16 21 2017: 27 44 10 7 22 64 20 20 $1,000, 2022: 89 972 (D) 23 127 980 88 (D) 2017: 753 412 81 43 246 373 75 106 : Value of food sold directly to retail markets, : institutions, and food hubs for local or regionally : branded products ...................................farms, 2022: 14 21 3 - 18 42 8 13 2017: 7 1 2 - 11 12 1 5 $1,000, 2022: 1,281 (D) 21 - 372 4,652 494 219 2017: 63 (D) (D) - 106 (D) (D) (D) : VALUE-ADDED PRODUCTS SOLD : : Value of processed or value-added agricultural : products sold ......................................farms, 2022: - 19 - 3 6 17 9 6 2017: 3 7 - 7 12 16 3 5 $1,000, 2022: - 80 - 19 28 4,643 37 (D) 2017: 7 32 - 42 198 (D) (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2022: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 2017: 24,996 1,304 232 757 395 288 1,177 $1,000, 2022: 9,317,904 188,082 13,121 48,805 27,246 26,940 489,011 2017: 6,651,559 113,125 11,215 39,772 27,108 21,806 409,779 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 407,304 164,695 57,296 48,562 77,185 112,251 452,369 2017: 266,105 86,753 48,340 52,539 68,627 75,715 348,155 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2022: 9,896 457 57 273 100 93 532 2017: 11,728 646 72 264 118 129 599 $1,000, 2022: 765,559 7,681 264 5,631 1,852 7,082 74,252 2017: 506,953 5,997 281 2,664 2,034 4,441 57,028 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2022: 10,419 534 80 339 121 97 480 2017: 12,014 737 86 275 136 103 581 $1,000, 2022: 410,258 2,792 53 1,782 761 3,796 40,524 2017: 286,983 2,988 125 1,344 817 2,773 25,342 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2022: 7,732 311 39 287 91 100 352 2017: 7,763 291 46 182 125 73 369 $1,000, 2022: 378,944 5,767 122 3,663 757 1,525 39,041 2017: 269,331 3,609 75 1,927 594 1,226 29,846 Cover crop seed purchased .......................farms, 2022: 1,065 43 5 27 11 12 47 2017: 935 35 4 18 11 4 21 $1,000, 2022: 4,094 46 1 52 18 24 293 2017: 2,719 22 (D) 66 9 (D) 150 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2022: 6,503 343 61 281 106 53 343 2017: 7,526 463 84 261 143 52 473 $1,000, 2022: 722,700 4,835 1,916 1,963 2,290 83 22,367 2017: 616,455 4,979 1,446 1,738 1,795 267 22,477 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 3,243 97 37 112 69 28 169 2017: 4,311 184 48 157 101 33 265 $1,000, 2022: 121,882 2,906 483 1,115 1,711 50 2,863 2017: 114,900 1,796 810 1,221 1,313 198 3,060 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 4,301 283 30 214 51 33 226 2017: 4,506 340 43 161 67 35 287 $1,000, 2022: 600,818 1,930 1,433 848 580 32 19,504 2017: 501,555 3,183 636 517 483 69 19,417 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2022: 13,525 715 159 642 217 98 709 2017: 15,186 857 155 511 256 119 811 $1,000, 2022: 2,598,813 66,947 3,595 3,387 3,194 314 28,168 2017: 1,794,336 38,473 2,005 4,586 3,352 241 26,035 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2022: 21,557 1,063 219 907 329 224 1,056 2017: 23,333 1,187 214 691 373 263 1,147 $1,000, 2022: 395,457 7,740 1,085 4,035 2,699 1,796 25,687 2017: 248,007 5,181 861 2,735 3,371 1,157 20,524 Utilities .........................................farms, 2022: 15,852 783 160 580 246 140 850 2017: 17,498 884 171 526 263 142 946 $1,000, 2022: 357,174 8,475 384 2,759 1,033 542 26,360 2017: 270,332 3,714 385 2,574 1,582 396 26,722 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2022: 18,678 908 197 726 302 189 934 2017: 20,142 992 197 592 342 184 1,051 $1,000, 2022: 632,154 15,385 1,284 5,563 3,711 2,904 42,790 2017: 418,246 6,862 1,226 4,620 3,179 1,826 29,083 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2022: 5,697 187 33 138 74 56 325 2017: 7,186 289 53 173 76 64 418 $1,000, 2022: 1,043,118 27,753 1,156 4,391 2,148 2,424 56,007 2017: 735,969 15,901 1,177 4,673 2,394 3,533 47,233 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2022: 2,547 100 18 71 31 17 145 2017: 2,388 104 24 59 33 20 150 $1,000, 2022: 101,956 1,632 217 728 364 92 6,885 2017: 69,746 922 193 286 243 77 3,893 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2022: 5,857 344 39 167 80 42 305 2017: 7,048 465 58 129 81 40 382 $1,000, 2022: 247,148 3,078 198 1,586 469 781 9,096 2017: 167,865 3,076 167 1,027 389 308 5,851 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2022: 5,471 117 53 135 113 46 375 2017: 6,044 137 62 140 130 48 418 $1,000, 2022: 550,451 8,675 805 3,158 2,455 1,959 57,804 2017: 388,375 4,567 875 2,972 2,020 796 55,263 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2022: 1,821 63 11 43 17 11 135 2017: 2,007 91 6 43 25 13 161 $1,000, 2022: 80,056 551 42 328 97 132 6,197 2017: 69,978 511 31 163 61 70 7,334 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2022: 6,805 224 39 236 113 64 404 2017: 8,257 310 85 223 149 106 458 $1,000, 2022: 286,045 5,337 519 3,252 2,243 1,093 18,509 2017: 253,583 3,893 949 3,339 2,202 2,103 25,290 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2022: 4,788 169 29 157 95 41 294 2017: 6,328 253 73 149 107 94 357 $1,000, 2022: 188,811 3,870 374 2,283 1,819 828 10,526 2017: 168,803 2,958 826 2,495 1,664 1,697 14,706 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2022: 4,230 124 25 163 66 42 240 2017: 5,001 154 41 135 107 63 284 $1,000, 2022: 97,234 1,467 145 969 424 265 7,983 2017: 84,780 934 124 844 538 406 10,584 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2022: 21,486 1,066 219 942 339 222 1,003 2017: 23,476 1,249 223 703 377 267 1,079 $1,000, 2022: 128,588 8,942 612 3,189 1,254 819 5,510 2017: 102,966 5,372 532 1,988 1,169 819 4,666 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2022: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 2017: 190 90 1,213 1,109 348 189 151 $1,000, 2022: 52,548 4,459 20,964 208,865 44,616 41,275 20,620 2017: 27,096 2,672 16,472 142,833 30,414 30,443 19,430 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 258,859 41,288 26,271 233,892 139,861 280,781 185,763 2017: 142,610 29,689 13,579 128,794 87,395 161,075 128,677 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2022: 87 28 275 401 141 87 42 2017: 77 23 421 523 158 130 49 $1,000, 2022: 5,592 102 1,505 30,586 4,907 5,608 2,196 2017: 1,841 85 737 18,889 1,943 3,343 1,549 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2022: 75 26 210 433 130 80 50 2017: 61 28 320 548 132 121 47 $1,000, 2022: 1,673 8 245 15,066 4,152 1,289 937 2017: 619 9 289 7,081 2,569 1,120 223 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2022: 60 30 256 272 157 63 51 2017: 49 12 366 258 121 92 54 $1,000, 2022: 2,534 37 1,188 16,794 1,870 1,814 1,873 2017: 1,110 (D) 505 6,207 1,132 1,518 1,340 Cover crop seed purchased .......................farms, 2022: 13 10 48 31 37 4 8 2017: 6 - 44 40 34 23 6 $1,000, 2022: 59 6 49 60 81 13 18 2017: 24 - 10 141 18 89 3 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2022: 56 35 259 211 96 41 31 2017: 51 30 321 286 87 44 18 $1,000, 2022: 4,687 278 987 19,404 374 1,199 493 2017: 870 132 871 18,757 286 390 110 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 33 24 82 88 66 22 22 2017: 39 19 135 145 48 31 9 $1,000, 2022: 750 184 302 726 304 293 161 2017: 655 98 347 3,586 202 328 78 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 32 16 211 162 57 26 13 2017: 19 15 245 191 51 30 11 $1,000, 2022: 3,938 94 685 18,678 70 906 333 2017: 215 35 524 15,171 85 62 32 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2022: 119 84 500 505 160 78 43 2017: 107 65 735 589 198 75 48 $1,000, 2022: 2,099 728 2,377 19,011 1,041 1,596 546 2017: 1,679 304 2,076 15,885 1,090 1,021 212 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2022: 201 98 766 838 310 142 98 2017: 182 81 1,094 989 336 180 141 $1,000, 2022: 3,838 324 1,822 11,352 2,642 3,274 1,511 2017: 1,653 151 1,521 8,996 1,440 2,449 1,686 Utilities .........................................farms, 2022: 174 76 426 614 218 130 79 2017: 150 64 572 695 213 162 107 $1,000, 2022: 3,410 220 1,086 11,400 982 3,861 1,153 2017: 2,772 119 847 6,469 716 4,986 1,613 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2022: 187 80 580 709 270 134 88 2017: 170 74 815 804 272 170 126 $1,000, 2022: 7,565 403 2,390 16,524 2,789 5,380 2,283 2017: 3,228 310 1,788 10,194 2,399 3,127 2,985 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2022: 84 16 129 249 90 64 29 2017: 88 17 147 288 89 73 41 $1,000, 2022: 7,680 718 3,918 22,013 15,191 5,096 3,813 2017: 5,833 421 1,546 12,426 9,765 3,197 3,268 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2022: 48 20 55 73 22 23 10 2017: 27 5 54 84 21 21 19 $1,000, 2022: 647 55 460 2,022 675 783 206 2017: 181 7 230 967 605 146 (D) Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2022: 81 14 58 165 54 62 58 2017: 75 11 111 283 49 96 65 $1,000, 2022: 1,207 96 79 3,351 918 1,508 2,633 2017: 870 (D) 147 2,340 493 1,748 1,475 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2022: 61 22 56 207 63 55 17 2017: 48 25 86 221 96 56 31 $1,000, 2022: 3,416 138 492 12,857 3,343 2,462 434 2017: 2,069 79 424 14,121 1,712 2,170 1,192 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2022: 13 3 36 61 33 21 15 2017: 15 5 41 85 20 14 10 $1,000, 2022: 255 7 92 2,786 177 668 353 2017: 120 (D) 98 1,400 174 361 (D) : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2022: 88 30 131 218 92 73 42 2017: 59 21 255 349 87 114 52 $1,000, 2022: 3,074 201 783 5,736 977 1,432 589 2017: 1,463 183 1,673 6,757 484 1,898 791 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2022: 70 28 83 160 65 52 26 2017: 43 16 215 264 64 84 42 $1,000, 2022: 2,425 175 652 3,119 670 1,028 382 2017: 1,068 142 1,479 4,606 400 1,522 626 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2022: 47 7 78 131 66 40 23 2017: 38 16 131 192 42 67 32 $1,000, 2022: 649 25 131 2,617 307 404 207 2017: 395 41 194 2,151 84 377 165 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2022: 199 108 760 847 304 137 108 2017: 180 84 1,190 1,054 325 182 136 $1,000, 2022: 1,729 280 2,070 4,296 1,419 1,195 714 2017: 782 272 2,047 3,844 1,017 1,012 524 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2022: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 2017: 2,289 411 585 68 312 267 340 $1,000, 2022: 727,202 98,011 998,960 43,706 9,276 29,792 511,442 2017: 521,718 78,732 818,784 22,098 7,853 29,529 365,986 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 314,670 245,641 1,803,176 652,326 33,978 126,774 1,800,853 2017: 227,924 191,563 1,399,630 324,975 25,169 110,595 1,076,431 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2022: 1,013 159 276 24 101 82 72 2017: 1,092 167 334 33 126 113 124 $1,000, 2022: 50,908 17,360 65,809 5,101 845 2,382 14,566 2017: 38,041 10,045 39,840 2,588 721 2,285 18,106 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2022: 1,213 186 308 28 96 58 81 2017: 1,302 201 321 33 132 103 127 $1,000, 2022: 34,157 6,757 34,274 1,783 400 365 8,591 2017: 27,977 3,694 21,607 865 636 753 20,952 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2022: 754 149 252 24 52 46 75 2017: 691 146 218 22 48 76 94 $1,000, 2022: 26,151 5,424 36,571 1,445 240 401 7,218 2017: 19,014 5,574 22,573 (D) 606 416 7,901 Cover crop seed purchased .......................farms, 2022: 107 16 23 1 7 9 14 2017: 90 15 33 5 2 19 13 $1,000, 2022: 406 148 326 (D) 1 34 75 2017: 231 39 163 11 (D) 21 118 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2022: 734 118 168 21 47 84 96 2017: 744 140 184 19 50 100 101 $1,000, 2022: 35,238 3,144 112,131 1,388 269 1,331 (D) 2017: 15,071 5,154 165,631 636 148 2,089 (D) Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 351 75 106 17 23 46 48 2017: 388 86 127 18 20 76 51 $1,000, 2022: 18,550 1,084 23,243 1,073 76 1,091 3,925 2017: 7,309 1,507 19,589 481 97 1,176 (D) Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 528 73 87 10 35 50 58 2017: 500 80 96 7 40 34 63 $1,000, 2022: 16,688 2,060 88,889 316 192 240 (D) 2017: 7,762 3,646 146,042 155 51 913 (D) Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2022: 1,603 232 318 42 136 153 205 2017: 1,516 234 342 41 165 198 229 $1,000, 2022: 148,527 9,384 328,526 2,480 772 5,139 229,195 2017: 116,313 9,439 300,714 1,471 369 4,983 140,762 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2022: 2,208 375 538 65 237 232 250 2017: 2,123 395 542 66 274 264 331 $1,000, 2022: 30,768 6,828 37,724 3,582 699 1,731 11,677 2017: 18,717 4,392 19,438 1,150 575 2,079 7,397 Utilities .........................................farms, 2022: 1,678 263 461 55 140 189 176 2017: 1,608 306 504 58 144 225 240 $1,000, 2022: 22,855 3,708 35,140 3,033 334 1,935 12,759 2017: 16,030 3,373 22,123 2,285 282 2,354 7,654 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2022: 1,909 336 488 59 203 206 227 2017: 1,803 346 522 61 217 242 281 $1,000, 2022: 55,617 9,879 51,751 4,553 959 2,999 13,169 2017: 37,917 6,574 30,182 1,856 810 2,932 9,313 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2022: 441 121 251 29 52 73 73 2017: 534 140 267 28 63 90 97 $1,000, 2022: 129,213 11,164 99,637 6,172 1,921 3,712 35,162 2017: 94,240 8,071 65,112 2,478 1,523 3,411 35,893 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2022: 280 66 102 14 25 35 27 2017: 284 44 101 5 15 19 38 $1,000, 2022: 21,579 786 6,995 641 150 363 2,721 2017: 16,527 633 5,044 (D) 22 204 2,673 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2022: 644 87 248 23 32 62 74 2017: 814 107 219 22 23 100 93 $1,000, 2022: 26,402 2,724 27,170 1,309 135 1,110 8,183 2017: 17,612 1,859 17,232 1,138 79 861 5,134 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2022: 485 134 221 35 30 70 90 2017: 455 132 215 29 39 94 77 $1,000, 2022: 40,907 4,742 58,651 2,432 581 1,784 14,500 2017: 29,590 5,366 35,881 3,234 342 1,113 7,408 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2022: 165 34 109 10 14 16 25 2017: 191 43 90 9 9 13 28 $1,000, 2022: 6,770 1,868 8,572 1,656 87 98 3,499 2017: 4,235 2,817 6,488 (D) 15 78 3,300 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2022: 630 158 228 34 54 74 87 2017: 685 174 240 27 72 96 97 $1,000, 2022: 21,057 4,986 30,466 5,519 462 2,218 8,398 2017: 17,709 5,082 23,474 1,022 562 2,365 6,940 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2022: 450 113 152 21 45 60 59 2017: 558 143 191 19 61 83 76 $1,000, 2022: 13,138 3,195 21,003 3,343 411 1,429 5,510 2017: 11,330 3,918 12,061 424 459 1,769 3,825 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2022: 372 95 158 25 28 41 60 2017: 370 100 160 22 31 58 76 $1,000, 2022: 7,920 1,791 9,463 2,176 51 789 2,888 2017: 6,379 1,164 11,413 598 102 596 3,116 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2022: 2,183 378 500 62 265 224 258 2017: 2,146 381 536 54 301 251 328 $1,000, 2022: 10,882 2,443 7,547 594 741 1,177 2,196 2017: 8,901 1,732 5,295 218 573 766 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2022: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 2017: 787 513 860 538 708 750 486 1,073 $1,000, 2022: 98,731 192,088 37,829 919,478 75,126 329,729 793,774 31,140 2017: 69,458 122,579 47,327 645,848 45,591 270,091 556,812 28,027 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 135,806 352,455 52,687 1,842,641 107,940 485,610 1,771,818 32,169 2017: 88,256 238,945 55,032 1,200,460 64,394 360,121 1,145,703 26,120 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2022: 284 274 294 272 339 367 273 293 2017: 322 261 381 279 352 426 293 424 $1,000, 2022: 3,997 43,236 5,513 22,457 12,089 42,571 25,884 3,406 2017: 2,655 27,018 2,705 11,976 5,271 29,507 13,866 1,720 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2022: 366 238 332 245 338 363 254 291 2017: 397 251 378 267 370 386 280 376 $1,000, 2022: 2,068 21,052 1,035 9,244 5,917 30,381 13,289 1,469 2017: 2,460 12,426 852 7,378 3,930 16,770 9,447 908 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2022: 246 184 202 215 231 218 199 285 2017: 271 181 211 179 220 276 216 222 $1,000, 2022: 3,343 15,010 1,306 13,675 4,122 13,222 17,012 1,030 2017: 2,167 12,665 1,489 9,215 2,322 13,298 10,640 1,814 Cover crop seed purchased .......................farms, 2022: 39 24 25 41 26 32 34 44 2017: 42 25 27 32 14 33 28 28 $1,000, 2022: 46 296 9 226 73 125 225 24 2017: 64 209 16 123 26 50 236 10 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2022: 210 126 222 159 173 246 147 261 2017: 217 110 337 158 213 245 144 272 $1,000, 2022: 5,710 2,215 1,455 37,929 2,756 36,398 78,373 940 2017: 3,282 3,469 2,476 30,068 2,294 37,221 118,046 887 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 107 65 80 103 103 139 66 91 2017: 152 74 165 93 140 165 78 97 $1,000, 2022: 3,684 1,539 790 (D) 1,782 5,020 10,590 395 2017: (D) 2,693 871 7,300 1,074 5,634 17,718 312 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 130 71 170 80 93 163 91 207 2017: 117 69 224 82 107 130 83 211 $1,000, 2022: 2,026 676 666 (D) 973 31,378 67,783 545 2017: (D) 776 1,606 22,768 1,220 31,587 100,328 575 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2022: 413 244 484 331 410 416 263 531 2017: 477 245 597 368 460 459 282 647 $1,000, 2022: 22,588 8,161 4,876 449,159 5,852 51,203 351,571 2,925 2017: 16,768 6,197 7,435 326,972 4,306 28,945 200,951 2,309 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2022: 684 489 703 470 664 658 439 908 2017: 752 470 794 517 680 727 462 958 $1,000, 2022: 6,648 10,272 2,184 20,453 5,857 16,939 22,130 2,204 2017: 4,273 4,962 4,280 13,881 3,538 12,012 11,237 1,685 Utilities .........................................farms, 2022: 481 391 553 399 448 483 366 527 2017: 569 408 603 429 460 571 400 579 $1,000, 2022: 4,197 9,154 1,411 25,405 2,070 14,765 23,961 1,572 2017: 3,305 6,462 1,529 14,662 1,491 16,892 14,689 1,345 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2022: 591 456 600 448 567 587 389 684 2017: 654 428 666 459 573 664 415 757 $1,000, 2022: 11,504 14,518 3,527 50,502 6,137 22,488 38,677 3,245 2017: 8,095 9,052 5,489 34,604 4,384 18,531 25,624 3,064 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2022: 173 167 118 187 152 183 177 102 2017: 272 191 205 176 179 245 183 209 $1,000, 2022: 16,250 20,859 5,845 105,133 5,489 30,160 80,869 3,679 2017: 8,921 12,971 7,201 62,342 3,454 21,418 58,525 3,748 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2022: 58 78 58 68 72 58 80 51 2017: 57 49 65 57 52 59 55 39 $1,000, 2022: 655 3,454 455 5,019 675 2,151 5,462 179 2017: 607 1,420 380 4,863 254 5,057 5,411 318 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2022: 196 129 163 202 126 223 187 95 2017: 211 119 213 213 139 235 207 124 $1,000, 2022: 2,123 3,955 840 37,557 1,488 7,884 22,772 331 2017: 1,350 2,763 1,040 28,099 832 6,086 9,619 259 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2022: 132 157 124 151 212 190 145 72 2017: 202 165 159 157 234 200 127 101 $1,000, 2022: 3,829 15,572 2,446 23,379 7,171 31,116 34,968 2,029 2017: 3,127 7,075 4,572 10,156 4,987 19,342 19,571 1,041 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2022: 41 49 43 49 52 54 63 54 2017: 40 47 58 54 48 61 54 66 $1,000, 2022: 939 3,601 323 1,106 1,614 2,844 2,448 469 2017: 242 2,403 258 5,207 740 4,238 4,135 410 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2022: 210 160 192 182 209 200 191 225 2017: 286 185 259 210 202 258 201 236 $1,000, 2022: 4,907 4,973 1,868 31,154 3,323 8,497 16,553 1,601 2017: 4,297 5,708 2,862 18,327 2,335 11,471 11,134 2,513 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2022: 167 118 125 125 137 132 114 147 2017: 190 153 204 137 152 189 151 211 $1,000, 2022: 3,503 3,593 1,442 25,877 2,490 5,236 9,237 1,328 2017: 3,039 4,008 2,359 13,107 1,867 5,724 7,806 2,215 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2022: 114 96 115 116 142 135 135 127 2017: 182 111 140 152 119 189 141 122 $1,000, 2022: 1,404 1,380 426 5,277 832 3,261 7,316 272 2017: 1,258 1,700 503 5,220 468 5,747 3,328 298 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2022: 706 524 685 444 641 641 417 945 2017: 735 487 825 493 658 708 452 1,058 $1,000, 2022: 2,033 3,281 2,027 8,402 1,693 4,266 6,239 3,569 2017: 1,638 1,880 1,773 6,049 1,804 5,658 3,665 3,319 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2022: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 2017: 1,041 351 197 276 454 620 446 422 $1,000, 2022: 95,102 25,897 70,617 219,158 162,823 484,262 90,727 55,809 2017: 77,288 24,266 33,831 168,616 128,439 315,655 77,466 28,658 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 96,160 84,632 322,453 957,022 454,812 1,066,657 218,620 125,132 2017: 74,244 69,133 171,732 610,927 282,906 509,122 173,691 67,910 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2022: 390 109 125 89 264 264 218 144 2017: 440 161 118 133 302 376 226 153 $1,000, 2022: 20,973 1,219 14,405 6,793 34,271 66,555 15,221 7,691 2017: 12,448 1,472 6,293 7,622 29,320 30,841 12,536 2,147 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2022: 449 91 144 74 228 241 245 135 2017: 473 129 116 127 259 353 253 174 $1,000, 2022: 11,276 264 8,282 3,938 15,498 42,024 10,608 2,543 2017: 9,803 117 5,271 3,050 12,814 21,814 11,402 757 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2022: 339 61 116 84 200 177 181 149 2017: 289 80 91 121 193 246 157 144 $1,000, 2022: 8,231 235 5,341 5,167 14,525 32,972 8,938 3,282 2017: 5,793 220 3,365 4,964 10,751 26,344 6,977 1,217 Cover crop seed purchased .......................farms, 2022: 54 9 4 7 14 26 18 29 2017: 26 19 6 19 14 18 11 15 $1,000, 2022: 25 16 (D) 82 180 183 19 78 2017: 16 36 16 79 15 138 11 18 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2022: 140 122 30 66 68 114 111 121 2017: 238 118 33 91 150 165 96 120 $1,000, 2022: 388 3,391 510 22,960 1,407 3,300 1,247 2,072 2017: 670 2,334 520 12,050 2,771 3,208 2,042 (D) Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 55 70 12 49 33 55 53 57 2017: 108 89 25 67 108 90 44 82 $1,000, 2022: 124 1,576 106 (D) 1,206 1,964 485 1,365 2017: 326 2,115 270 7,109 1,589 1,840 580 (D) Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 106 71 22 30 48 77 71 81 2017: 168 48 11 34 77 92 67 55 $1,000, 2022: 264 1,815 403 (D) 201 1,336 762 706 2017: 344 219 250 4,941 1,182 1,368 1,462 974 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2022: 330 244 77 139 146 253 211 217 2017: 451 280 84 180 238 345 265 237 $1,000, 2022: 1,760 3,584 686 93,258 3,379 53,701 2,118 3,712 2017: 1,733 4,093 590 74,646 1,760 34,217 2,429 5,514 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2022: 863 297 201 224 340 427 377 405 2017: 914 347 190 261 431 588 416 389 $1,000, 2022: 6,301 1,929 4,492 8,028 9,861 25,882 5,945 4,049 2017: 6,201 1,734 1,767 5,134 6,094 13,095 3,836 2,336 Utilities .........................................farms, 2022: 467 228 156 167 275 372 256 279 2017: 536 269 132 236 350 514 297 317 $1,000, 2022: 2,105 1,570 2,086 7,748 11,652 26,761 2,990 2,466 2017: 1,702 1,505 446 6,642 10,408 21,776 1,123 1,473 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2022: 658 274 192 189 310 403 334 334 2017: 738 288 143 252 378 543 362 347 $1,000, 2022: 9,026 2,437 5,358 14,552 14,079 49,413 7,716 6,664 2017: 7,548 2,382 2,077 7,864 10,517 28,666 4,896 3,821 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2022: 195 90 75 74 155 168 108 100 2017: 222 117 69 126 214 253 142 136 $1,000, 2022: 7,686 2,526 8,298 21,071 18,676 66,207 6,435 5,250 2017: 7,191 3,351 1,564 12,181 12,986 46,146 5,514 2,967 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2022: 120 36 20 34 77 69 53 31 2017: 67 46 12 21 83 91 37 36 $1,000, 2022: 647 477 590 400 2,155 8,514 627 868 2017: 359 346 81 1,063 1,603 2,679 381 159 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2022: 143 62 50 73 108 147 84 113 2017: 139 62 50 136 152 246 77 116 $1,000, 2022: 2,119 526 1,464 8,635 4,059 7,642 2,858 1,806 2017: 1,446 475 1,256 4,778 2,595 11,485 1,674 1,124 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2022: 177 80 100 70 164 184 115 85 2017: 180 109 80 75 158 233 125 105 $1,000, 2022: 10,273 2,709 9,217 4,531 11,867 56,289 11,572 2,854 2017: 8,772 1,108 4,975 4,366 8,867 41,254 9,877 1,060 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2022: 53 15 21 15 58 63 57 32 2017: 76 31 28 34 37 98 37 26 $1,000, 2022: 1,174 234 651 379 1,781 6,026 2,873 1,210 2017: 889 255 701 1,947 836 5,888 3,086 166 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2022: 220 94 72 84 154 169 108 145 2017: 287 115 68 122 185 259 123 136 $1,000, 2022: 3,092 1,274 2,484 3,695 5,406 10,762 3,497 4,608 2017: 4,009 1,526 1,089 8,147 6,236 8,385 2,721 1,473 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2022: 144 72 44 58 82 120 71 117 2017: 220 89 48 98 135 184 69 84 $1,000, 2022: 1,602 1,014 1,506 2,794 3,899 4,951 1,614 3,744 2017: 3,047 1,256 694 4,062 4,347 5,106 1,625 1,250 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2022: 158 54 54 58 112 101 76 64 2017: 169 58 48 88 107 149 99 76 $1,000, 2022: 1,491 260 978 901 1,507 5,811 1,883 864 2017: 962 269 395 4,085 1,889 3,279 1,096 224 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2022: 926 294 197 212 331 405 376 428 2017: 986 334 161 265 426 578 388 415 $1,000, 2022: 2,868 1,020 1,225 1,363 2,309 5,718 2,125 2,323 2017: 3,078 1,059 771 1,310 2,768 3,580 1,699 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses ......................farms, 2022: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 2017: 565 640 295 48 277 1,211 188 535 $1,000, 2022: 378,345 263,797 326,330 522 58,288 943,015 10,032 50,344 2017: 249,199 147,226 223,064 787 38,884 557,701 8,394 49,488 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 820,705 459,577 1,182,354 11,857 217,493 806,685 70,647 101,704 2017: 441,060 230,041 756,148 16,396 140,376 460,529 44,650 92,500 : Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners : purchased ........................................farms, 2022: 219 278 122 10 106 627 35 200 2017: 259 320 140 13 117 750 33 251 $1,000, 2022: 16,514 10,349 52,348 14 9,388 42,391 262 3,784 2017: 11,094 6,281 41,829 20 5,362 29,195 126 3,189 Chemicals purchased ...............................farms, 2022: 233 320 129 8 125 639 52 254 2017: 321 377 145 13 109 718 55 293 $1,000, 2022: 14,081 4,832 26,832 2 4,939 18,836 66 2,376 2017: 5,822 4,167 19,365 5 2,914 11,745 51 1,929 Seeds, plants, vines, and trees purchased .........farms, 2022: 165 182 114 10 98 465 34 156 2017: 177 178 119 11 114 536 26 172 $1,000, 2022: 10,061 5,030 36,055 13 4,559 18,888 95 2,397 2017: 5,560 3,852 19,847 (D) 3,687 15,200 102 1,983 Cover crop seed purchased .......................farms, 2022: 19 30 18 - 16 60 5 18 2017: 25 12 12 - 19 68 1 18 $1,000, 2022: 71 115 165 - 27 366 2 25 2017: 46 19 155 - 106 136 (D) 52 : Livestock and poultry purchased or : leased ...........................................farms, 2022: 182 163 49 17 55 361 35 141 2017: 191 227 75 17 81 383 55 139 $1,000, 2022: 66,273 (D) (D) 45 829 36,058 2,129 4,168 2017: 31,124 23,507 8,969 162 501 14,324 991 2,554 Breeding livestock purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 109 84 34 9 27 211 17 99 2017: 136 142 45 11 47 252 28 93 $1,000, 2022: 3,247 2,592 570 22 441 10,792 145 1,960 2017: 2,911 (D) 558 137 389 8,377 169 808 Other livestock and poultry purchased or : leased .........................................farms, 2022: 104 118 26 14 35 207 28 63 2017: 106 128 37 11 39 187 37 71 $1,000, 2022: 63,027 (D) (D) 22 388 25,266 1,984 2,208 2017: 28,213 (D) 8,411 24 112 5,947 822 1,746 Feed purchased ....................................farms, 2022: 325 354 110 35 128 742 98 306 2017: 376 422 136 33 140 771 141 301 $1,000, 2022: 137,078 87,916 16,137 88 823 433,962 3,112 4,137 2017: 94,311 49,024 10,605 130 791 235,639 2,907 11,053 : Gasoline, fuels, and oils purchased ...............farms, 2022: 453 548 250 44 247 1,102 122 486 2017: 549 611 270 46 265 1,148 171 504 $1,000, 2022: 13,142 8,391 20,210 78 5,065 30,296 429 3,857 2017: 8,714 5,148 9,367 70 2,224 17,663 458 2,828 Utilities .........................................farms, 2022: 346 451 194 32 185 902 81 375 2017: 427 509 213 42 184 985 105 383 $1,000, 2022: 12,917 6,255 18,140 35 2,711 33,119 221 2,435 2017: 12,629 3,631 15,880 58 2,401 21,162 295 1,829 Repairs, supplies, and maintenance costs ..........farms, 2022: 392 480 245 35 223 1,008 108 439 2017: 485 557 245 44 227 1,049 140 467 $1,000, 2022: 15,268 13,020 21,228 49 5,503 63,036 850 5,458 2017: 12,220 7,064 19,592 95 3,006 33,836 559 4,850 Hired farm labor ..................................farms, 2022: 145 139 108 3 87 345 30 102 2017: 193 178 115 8 88 436 41 153 $1,000, 2022: 37,348 23,116 31,436 14 10,470 89,869 561 6,582 2017: 24,913 16,270 25,085 20 6,322 63,370 1,098 6,316 : Contract labor ....................................farms, 2022: 67 71 38 1 27 137 13 48 2017: 80 71 27 3 19 160 15 60 $1,000, 2022: 2,580 (D) 8,909 (D) 427 7,123 174 1,008 2017: 2,565 1,398 3,145 14 191 3,222 26 587 Customwork and custom hauling .....................farms, 2022: 161 192 72 - 52 477 15 148 2017: 180 229 91 2 79 592 30 183 $1,000, 2022: 7,780 4,870 5,656 - 1,183 27,726 129 1,709 2017: 5,468 3,416 3,391 (D) 1,221 16,123 186 1,358 Cash rent for land, buildings, : and grazing fees .................................farms, 2022: 152 147 103 - 95 290 23 118 2017: 177 137 109 13 112 342 45 160 $1,000, 2022: 8,679 13,384 31,605 - 5,503 35,499 447 3,919 2017: 6,737 4,860 19,268 21 3,338 29,034 319 3,456 Rent and lease expenses for machinery, : equipment, and farm share of vehicles ............farms, 2022: 40 39 58 - 10 89 6 25 2017: 67 29 36 2 28 106 5 27 $1,000, 2022: 1,800 894 6,744 - 608 7,694 50 359 2017: 1,284 531 3,768 (D) 484 3,756 49 198 : Interest expense ..................................farms, 2022: 152 197 111 9 63 439 37 163 2017: 247 221 132 12 70 560 39 185 $1,000, 2022: 11,627 9,468 9,145 41 1,790 26,312 496 2,621 2017: 9,193 4,973 9,488 13 3,050 23,573 288 2,593 : Secured by real estate ..........................farms, 2022: 109 157 85 7 36 303 24 125 2017: 177 176 108 7 54 428 30 142 $1,000, 2022: 9,482 5,129 5,370 33 1,297 15,131 427 1,933 2017: 6,944 2,970 7,007 10 2,526 17,533 236 2,093 Not secured by real estate ......................farms, 2022: 90 105 79 7 52 284 18 107 2017: 162 112 77 9 43 382 14 133 $1,000, 2022: 2,145 4,340 3,775 8 493 11,181 70 688 2017: 2,249 2,002 2,481 3 524 6,040 53 499 Property taxes paid ...............................farms, 2022: 421 538 258 44 257 1,080 126 466 2017: 524 601 275 46 257 1,087 179 492 $1,000, 2022: 3,772 2,341 2,826 113 1,036 7,978 293 2,157 2017: 3,314 1,917 3,107 99 1,040 6,684 357 1,740 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom : services for livestock ...........................farms, 2022: 9,388 404 105 402 166 49 549 2017: 12,564 649 125 414 247 93 737 $1,000, 2022: 172,113 6,008 344 648 481 48 2,963 2017: 103,133 2,233 364 618 520 97 2,708 : All other production expenses .....................farms, 2022: 12,433 426 142 437 227 127 629 2017: 10,195 341 97 280 184 103 540 $1,000, 2022: 447,370 6,482 524 2,741 1,440 1,551 26,850 2017: 349,302 4,847 523 2,518 1,385 1,677 20,485 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ............farms, 2022: 867 25 6 27 12 17 39 2017: 817 5 8 14 6 22 39 $1,000, 2022: 36,781 338 42 417 244 585 2,123 2017: 25,171 10 40 230 8 1,155 1,579 : Depreciation expenses claimed .......................farms, 2022: 15,202 737 154 534 247 146 752 2017: 9,741 331 90 253 163 103 545 $1,000, 2022: 892,639 22,267 1,829 8,685 6,060 4,906 47,132 2017: 552,594 8,462 1,722 4,656 4,065 2,664 40,506 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom : services for livestock ...........................farms, 2022: 103 45 313 334 131 68 34 2017: 105 51 467 514 161 80 28 $1,000, 2022: 1,062 88 396 3,502 309 173 111 2017: 332 61 444 1,400 170 232 (D) : All other production expenses .....................farms, 2022: 141 43 300 448 184 115 75 2017: 97 26 308 343 149 104 67 $1,000, 2022: 2,081 775 1,073 12,164 2,851 3,938 775 2017: 1,674 390 1,230 7,100 4,420 1,726 1,208 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ............farms, 2022: 3 - 6 19 9 2 - 2017: 2 1 13 21 13 2 3 $1,000, 2022: (D) - 14 1,022 514 (D) - 2017: (D) (D) 43 126 119 (D) (D) : Depreciation expenses claimed .......................farms, 2022: 180 61 401 599 181 134 85 2017: 77 21 244 358 131 114 67 $1,000, 2022: 8,306 882 3,790 29,865 5,146 7,112 3,513 2017: 2,788 199 1,694 10,472 3,083 3,547 2,518 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom : services for livestock ...........................farms, 2022: 1,017 189 276 31 85 130 116 2017: 1,201 234 325 35 110 174 186 $1,000, 2022: 15,372 868 21,226 416 152 1,359 (D) 2017: 7,591 1,075 11,755 (D) 86 950 5,220 : All other production expenses .....................farms, 2022: 1,138 267 369 58 145 157 139 2017: 720 213 338 47 80 140 144 $1,000, 2022: 50,797 5,945 36,767 1,602 528 1,686 8,724 2017: 36,232 3,854 26,396 1,610 505 1,891 16,943 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ............farms, 2022: 66 22 33 2 - 4 10 2017: 59 18 36 - 4 1 8 $1,000, 2022: 2,665 839 1,951 (D) - 49 350 2017: 2,717 205 1,225 - 99 (D) 954 : Depreciation expenses claimed .......................farms, 2022: 1,492 269 430 49 96 193 192 2017: 766 188 308 31 73 115 105 $1,000, 2022: 82,538 18,198 73,061 6,686 754 6,482 25,129 2017: 52,107 6,710 45,360 2,211 787 5,298 33,395 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom : services for livestock ...........................farms, 2022: 324 192 316 258 276 324 228 298 2017: 411 215 467 342 385 360 237 460 $1,000, 2022: 2,387 678 571 29,738 1,179 2,853 19,713 430 2017: 1,166 672 744 19,299 751 2,073 14,353 536 : All other production expenses .....................farms, 2022: 414 325 341 305 411 397 297 378 2017: 320 273 276 250 322 307 252 314 $1,000, 2022: 5,554 12,097 2,149 49,164 7,696 11,994 33,854 2,062 2017: 5,105 5,436 2,243 42,751 2,896 21,572 25,897 2,150 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ............farms, 2022: 10 33 8 19 29 35 20 10 2017: 13 19 5 17 27 26 18 17 $1,000, 2022: 168 2,412 (D) 1,262 799 1,225 524 290 2017: 83 474 12 1,094 477 171 807 184 : Depreciation expenses claimed .......................farms, 2022: 499 382 489 417 412 495 358 486 2017: 336 243 276 250 309 308 251 255 $1,000, 2022: 14,805 18,694 6,122 63,377 9,088 37,244 71,359 5,763 2017: 9,097 10,691 5,531 53,720 4,214 23,955 33,224 3,474 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 3. Farm Production Expenses: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom : services for livestock ...........................farms, 2022: 221 191 51 106 100 182 126 180 2017: 334 244 79 179 202 303 207 224 $1,000, 2022: 273 957 190 5,750 219 3,928 442 644 2017: 353 1,010 142 3,437 511 2,366 532 429 : All other production expenses .....................farms, 2022: 430 167 164 146 246 285 257 267 2017: 358 157 118 154 231 323 203 202 $1,000, 2022: 6,908 1,545 5,337 10,889 11,681 18,568 5,517 3,769 2017: 5,294 1,281 2,923 9,413 7,599 13,911 6,741 1,136 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ............farms, 2022: 76 3 41 7 21 28 35 6 2017: 57 7 27 9 12 32 46 13 $1,000, 2022: 2,881 33 1,871 181 509 971 2,412 110 2017: 2,200 (D) 466 140 472 404 941 624 : Depreciation expenses claimed .......................farms, 2022: 463 234 159 185 303 340 241 277 2017: 419 174 104 150 242 274 203 202 $1,000, 2022: 15,503 4,270 9,823 19,501 21,528 36,257 11,735 7,310 2017: 9,286 4,608 2,756 10,364 17,956 24,793 4,987 2,953 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farm production expenses - Con. : : Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom : services for livestock ...........................farms, 2022: 230 251 90 10 96 509 55 227 2017: 318 390 118 25 131 642 103 252 $1,000, 2022: 8,623 (D) (D) (D) 236 24,218 212 641 2017: 6,666 1,176 1,326 41 197 8,300 212 735 : All other production expenses .....................farms, 2022: 288 307 188 15 155 714 62 307 2017: 314 229 171 11 122 644 67 256 $1,000, 2022: 10,800 8,626 23,369 25 3,219 40,009 507 2,735 2017: 7,582 10,010 9,033 24 2,155 24,875 371 2,289 : Production expenses paid by landlords 1/ ............farms, 2022: 27 21 24 - 4 88 3 17 2017: 31 13 19 - 2 116 1 15 $1,000, 2022: 967 364 1,625 - 11 5,750 (D) 523 2017: 3,261 130 205 - (D) 4,318 (D) 53 : Depreciation expenses claimed .......................farms, 2022: 361 398 193 19 154 915 90 400 2017: 274 274 160 12 105 575 49 213 $1,000, 2022: 26,151 20,560 29,845 219 9,326 81,932 1,596 8,289 2017: 13,613 9,897 16,725 39 6,760 46,839 488 4,381 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Landlord production expenses are included within total farm production expenses. Table 4. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Producers: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2022: 2,034,090 8,474 4,111 7,890 6,257 5,474 114,772 2017: 1,312,355 27,124 2,514 7,061 12,128 4,419 74,752 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 88,914 7,421 17,950 7,851 17,727 22,808 106,172 2017: 52,503 20,801 10,837 9,327 30,704 15,342 63,511 : Farms with net gains 1/ ...........................farms, 2022: 8,958 245 87 254 176 91 428 2017: 10,072 318 78 279 213 113 557 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 275,011 98,009 66,706 81,412 57,805 97,090 323,737 2017: 169,526 133,471 66,761 49,711 71,039 72,143 175,559 : Farms with net losses .............................farms, 2022: 13,919 897 142 751 177 149 653 2017: 14,924 986 154 478 182 175 620 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 30,854 17,322 11,921 17,029 22,126 22,559 36,429 2017: 26,475 15,537 17,488 14,245 16,502 21,335 37,152 : Net cash farm income of producers ..................$1,000, 2022: 1,897,116 8,339 3,538 7,461 6,186 4,200 113,765 2017: 1,235,021 27,134 2,443 6,822 11,996 2,767 74,977 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 82,927 7,302 15,449 7,424 17,525 17,498 105,241 2017: 49,409 20,809 10,531 9,012 30,370 9,609 63,702 : Producers reporting net gains 1/ ..................farms, 2022: 8,919 246 85 254 178 88 428 2017: 9,970 318 78 279 213 111 555 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 263,468 96,537 62,265 80,865 57,926 89,885 321,124 2017: 164,511 133,490 65,832 49,505 70,523 61,341 176,618 : Producers reporting net losses ....................farms, 2022: 13,958 896 144 751 175 152 653 2017: 15,026 986 154 478 182 177 622 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 32,437 17,197 12,186 17,415 23,568 24,409 36,257 2017: 26,964 15,533 17,479 14,622 16,623 22,834 37,052 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2022: 16,939 3,016 -405 59,343 7,880 25,602 16,489 2017: 2,242 127 -3,517 39,256 3,293 15,119 7,569 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 83,443 27,924 -508 66,454 24,701 174,160 148,548 2017: 11,801 1,413 -2,899 35,398 9,462 79,994 50,128 : Farms with net gains 1/ ...........................farms, 2022: 89 19 213 304 139 95 71 2017: 76 22 302 418 145 102 88 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 243,873 211,665 35,584 234,131 91,523 292,034 239,132 2017: 77,142 53,487 15,003 133,975 45,126 169,730 102,133 : Farms with net losses .............................farms, 2022: 114 89 585 589 180 52 40 2017: 114 68 911 691 203 87 63 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 41,805 11,302 13,649 20,089 26,900 41,186 12,239 2017: 31,760 15,435 8,834 24,233 16,012 25,213 22,514 : Net cash farm income of producers ..................$1,000, 2022: 16,793 3,016 -403 55,671 7,861 25,464 14,443 2017: 1,658 128 -3,526 39,014 3,177 15,115 7,249 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 82,722 27,924 -504 62,341 24,643 173,222 130,120 2017: 8,726 1,422 -2,907 35,179 9,130 79,973 48,008 : Producers reporting net gains 1/ ..................farms, 2022: 89 19 213 304 136 95 68 2017: 76 22 302 416 145 102 88 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 242,245 211,665 35,546 223,039 93,216 290,530 221,921 2017: 69,461 53,487 14,954 134,458 44,340 169,730 98,689 : Producers reporting net losses ....................farms, 2022: 114 89 585 589 183 52 43 2017: 114 68 911 693 203 87 63 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 41,817 11,302 13,631 20,600 26,319 41,090 15,054 2017: 31,764 15,423 8,827 24,416 16,020 25,259 22,786 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2022: 133,261 26,875 187,358 7,642 1,666 9,270 90,335 2017: 78,139 22,831 137,190 5,766 1,390 10,886 69,297 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 57,664 67,355 338,191 114,064 6,103 39,447 318,082 2017: 34,137 55,550 234,513 84,789 4,455 40,770 203,815 : Farms with net gains 1/ ...........................farms, 2022: 614 214 292 36 85 117 104 2017: 706 232 319 37 96 137 119 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 304,529 156,424 719,410 270,902 48,526 111,617 918,248 2017: 175,851 128,834 506,362 228,644 32,332 107,753 650,719 : Farms with net losses .............................farms, 2022: 1,697 185 262 31 188 118 180 2017: 1,583 179 266 31 216 130 221 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 31,656 35,675 86,678 68,069 13,077 32,112 28,680 2017: 29,066 39,433 91,502 86,908 7,935 29,819 36,825 : Net cash farm income of producers ..................$1,000, 2022: 133,588 24,656 181,680 6,477 1,592 9,154 51,009 2017: 72,780 18,918 137,640 5,709 1,220 10,748 35,488 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 57,805 61,794 327,942 96,669 5,832 38,953 179,607 2017: 31,796 46,029 235,283 83,960 3,910 40,256 104,377 : Producers reporting net gains 1/ ..................farms, 2022: 617 209 291 36 85 119 104 2017: 704 230 319 37 96 137 116 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 304,153 152,226 703,910 238,526 47,655 108,763 556,017 2017: 172,346 114,708 508,556 228,644 30,446 107,721 379,239 : Producers reporting net losses ....................farms, 2022: 1,694 190 263 31 188 116 180 2017: 1,585 181 266 31 216 130 224 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 31,921 37,682 88,052 68,069 13,077 32,662 37,874 2017: 30,632 41,242 92,439 88,727 7,884 30,842 37,962 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 4. Net Cash Farm Income of the Operations and Producers: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2022: 39,763 65,794 3,911 222,651 20,307 60,311 164,687 -2,489 2017: 20,862 23,201 -6,070 151,133 9,888 35,902 95,515 -627 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 54,694 120,724 5,448 446,195 29,177 88,823 367,604 -2,571 2017: 26,508 45,226 -7,059 280,916 13,966 47,869 196,532 -584 : Farms with net gains 1/ ...........................farms, 2022: 359 290 219 240 315 259 239 256 2017: 383 282 180 266 319 347 257 286 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 130,622 253,916 54,298 976,525 91,317 345,092 734,292 28,151 2017: 70,313 106,113 45,766 606,818 52,453 157,482 414,711 35,302 : Farms with net losses .............................farms, 2022: 368 255 499 259 381 420 209 712 2017: 404 231 680 272 389 403 229 787 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 19,376 30,750 15,992 45,230 22,198 69,209 51,719 13,617 2017: 15,020 29,103 21,042 37,796 17,596 46,512 48,324 13,626 : Net cash farm income of producers ..................$1,000, 2022: 39,295 63,578 3,956 214,211 18,776 51,216 156,745 -2,487 2017: 20,703 21,637 -6,075 149,272 8,915 34,561 94,051 -1,202 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 54,051 116,658 5,509 429,281 26,977 75,428 349,876 -2,569 2017: 26,307 42,177 -7,064 277,457 12,592 46,081 193,521 -1,120 : Producers reporting net gains 1/ ..................farms, 2022: 359 287 218 233 315 262 236 254 2017: 383 279 180 265 310 341 253 278 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 129,640 251,247 54,830 995,307 89,249 331,720 715,990 28,837 2017: 69,930 103,969 45,743 606,194 51,289 157,112 417,819 34,243 : Producers reporting net losses ....................farms, 2022: 368 258 500 266 381 417 212 714 2017: 404 234 680 273 398 409 233 795 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 19,690 33,060 15,995 66,523 24,509 85,599 57,684 13,742 2017: 15,049 31,498 21,042 41,647 17,548 46,490 50,031 13,487 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2022: 24,890 9,493 30,370 40,735 61,359 85,107 20,139 7,750 2017: 17,224 11,105 11,000 40,303 38,576 63,112 10,168 14,997 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 25,167 31,024 138,677 177,882 171,395 187,461 48,527 17,377 2017: 16,545 31,637 55,839 146,027 84,969 101,794 22,799 35,538 : Farms with net gains 1/ ...........................farms, 2022: 440 124 131 123 195 236 133 220 2017: 396 159 114 138 224 298 168 235 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 74,555 113,442 255,867 358,201 361,391 448,710 215,312 72,897 2017: 65,670 94,509 123,558 313,688 204,170 264,394 123,539 84,396 : Farms with net losses .............................farms, 2022: 549 182 88 106 163 218 282 226 2017: 645 192 83 138 230 322 278 187 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 14,415 25,128 35,777 31,355 55,901 95,360 30,134 36,669 2017: 13,615 20,429 37,171 21,634 31,122 48,687 38,079 25,861 : Net cash farm income of producers ..................$1,000, 2022: 22,130 9,406 26,919 40,762 59,983 83,718 15,671 7,587 2017: 14,615 11,060 8,471 40,368 37,710 62,576 6,014 13,187 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 22,377 30,737 122,916 177,999 167,550 184,400 37,763 17,012 2017: 14,040 31,511 42,999 146,259 83,062 100,930 13,485 31,248 : Producers reporting net gains 1/ ..................farms, 2022: 437 124 132 123 190 236 132 220 2017: 394 159 110 138 224 296 154 235 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 69,751 112,689 227,148 358,381 364,547 443,177 188,803 72,147 2017: 60,247 94,325 107,722 313,816 200,531 264,953 114,912 77,774 : Producers reporting net losses ....................farms, 2022: 552 182 87 106 168 218 283 226 2017: 647 192 87 138 230 324 292 187 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 15,128 25,098 35,230 31,313 55,245 95,744 32,687 36,660 2017: 14,099 20,507 38,835 21,297 31,343 48,919 40,008 27,221 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Net cash farm income of the operations .............$1,000, 2022: 97,181 59,034 51,135 -107 6,576 212,232 3,360 17,651 2017: 36,833 26,275 31,334 -486 10,194 144,928 3,004 6,400 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 210,804 102,846 185,271 -2,438 24,538 181,550 23,659 35,660 2017: 65,190 41,054 106,216 -10,131 36,800 119,676 15,981 11,963 : Farms with net gains 1/ ...........................farms, 2022: 203 216 161 9 123 517 60 217 2017: 275 231 177 - 146 565 59 210 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 530,651 321,508 393,523 22,705 118,795 471,697 75,393 109,463 2017: 191,621 151,047 239,423 - 90,546 292,679 82,644 64,893 : Farms with net losses .............................farms, 2022: 258 358 115 35 145 652 82 278 2017: 290 409 118 48 131 646 129 325 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 40,859 29,085 106,283 8,904 55,417 48,520 14,195 21,950 2017: 54,701 21,070 93,593 10,131 23,101 31,634 14,508 22,239 : Net cash farm income of producers ..................$1,000, 2022: 69,684 58,824 50,204 -107 5,960 205,858 2,780 17,960 2017: 33,460 26,209 30,488 -486 9,605 140,524 2,395 5,503 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 151,158 102,481 181,898 -2,438 22,238 176,097 19,575 36,283 2017: 59,222 40,952 103,350 -10,131 34,674 116,040 12,738 10,285 : Producers reporting net gains 1/ ..................farms, 2022: 202 215 162 9 123 509 60 217 2017: 266 232 174 - 141 551 55 208 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 396,820 321,491 386,966 22,705 118,261 469,204 65,712 111,054 2017: 181,910 150,389 240,032 - 90,893 293,641 79,701 62,018 : Producers reporting net losses ....................farms, 2022: 259 359 114 35 145 660 82 278 2017: 299 408 121 48 136 660 133 327 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 40,439 28,681 109,515 8,904 59,216 49,950 14,183 22,082 2017: 49,926 21,277 93,202 10,131 23,611 32,230 14,954 22,621 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. Table 5. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2022: 4,296 28 23 180 104 91 157 2017: 6,083 58 18 257 148 99 292 $1,000, 2022: 132,405 991 538 4,538 2,228 2,785 6,139 2017: 129,605 471 93 5,606 1,549 1,931 13,317 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 30,821 35,380 23,401 25,214 21,420 30,603 39,101 2017: 21,306 8,125 5,167 21,812 10,465 19,506 45,607 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .....................farms, 2022: 1,681 5 - 116 37 46 43 2017: 1,773 2 3 141 50 51 75 $1,000, 2022: 19,925 59 - 2,615 270 445 775 2017: 28,550 (D) (D) 3,290 409 402 1,850 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 11,853 11,702 - 22,544 7,306 9,679 18,018 2017: 16,103 (D) (D) 23,331 8,182 7,883 24,669 : Amount from other Federal farm programs ...........farms, 2022: 3,041 23 23 88 73 62 125 2017: 5,486 57 16 200 132 85 266 $1,000, 2022: 112,481 932 538 1,923 1,957 2,340 5,364 2017: 101,055 (D) (D) 2,316 1,140 1,529 11,467 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 36,988 40,527 23,401 21,857 26,813 37,737 42,913 2017: 18,420 (D) (D) 11,581 8,635 17,989 43,109 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2022: 39 - - 3 1 - 1 2017: 139 - - 3 2 5 11 $1,000, 2022: 5,255 - - 2 (D) - (D) 2017: 9,073 - - 6 (D) 521 491 Amount spent to repay CCC loans ...................farms, 2022: 47 - - - - 2 6 2017: 92 1 - 3 - 4 2 $1,000, 2022: 2,139 - - - - (D) 115 2017: 9,587 (D) - 1 - 440 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2022: 27 11 38 142 74 51 40 2017: 39 3 35 248 58 100 64 $1,000, 2022: 1,367 (D) 203 4,171 899 1,104 1,073 2017: 800 6 224 7,179 1,129 1,877 826 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 50,613 (D) 5,343 29,371 12,151 21,648 26,822 2017: 20,518 1,888 6,413 28,948 19,463 18,766 12,910 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .....................farms, 2022: 1 2 2 68 - 2 12 2017: 2 1 5 104 3 6 26 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) (D) 1,657 - (D) 101 2017: (D) (D) 120 3,037 26 13 276 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: (D) (D) (D) 24,370 - (D) 8,419 2017: (D) (D) 24,059 29,204 8,772 2,132 10,609 : Amount from other Federal farm programs ...........farms, 2022: 27 9 37 89 74 50 33 2017: 39 2 34 214 58 100 50 $1,000, 2022: (D) 85 (D) 2,514 899 (D) 972 2017: (D) (D) 104 4,142 1,103 1,864 550 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: (D) 9,399 (D) 28,243 12,151 (D) 29,450 2017: (D) (D) 3,063 19,355 19,009 18,638 11,009 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2022: - - - 1 - 2 - 2017: 2 - - 3 6 4 - $1,000, 2022: - - - (D) - (D) - 2017: (D) - - 380 120 398 - Amount spent to repay CCC loans ...................farms, 2022: 6 - - 1 - 3 - 2017: - - - - 6 5 - $1,000, 2022: 32 - - (D) - 300 - 2017: - - - - 501 1,238 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 5. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2022: 95 152 148 19 56 52 45 2017: 183 217 226 38 57 35 39 $1,000, 2022: 4,426 3,636 8,185 334 679 1,760 1,972 2017: 2,463 3,905 11,088 1,490 639 343 684 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 46,585 23,924 55,302 17,585 12,120 33,843 43,818 2017: 13,457 17,995 49,060 39,216 11,215 9,802 17,529 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .....................farms, 2022: 3 76 48 4 37 - 5 2017: 7 123 69 12 25 6 3 $1,000, 2022: (D) 929 1,417 31 137 - 64 2017: 20 1,748 3,414 367 98 51 (D) Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: (D) 12,220 29,528 7,695 3,697 - 12,811 2017: 2,840 14,213 49,483 30,589 3,936 8,429 (D) : Amount from other Federal farm programs ...........farms, 2022: 93 95 118 16 24 52 40 2017: 179 178 214 35 50 31 37 $1,000, 2022: (D) 2,708 6,767 303 542 1,760 1,908 2017: 2,443 2,157 7,673 1,123 541 292 (D) Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: (D) 28,503 57,350 18,959 22,581 33,843 47,694 2017: 13,646 12,117 35,857 32,090 10,818 9,435 (D) : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2022: - 2 1 - - 2 - 2017: 4 13 3 - - - 1 $1,000, 2022: - (D) (D) - - (D) - 2017: 13 1,026 (D) - - - (D) Amount spent to repay CCC loans ...................farms, 2022: 3 2 - 1 - - - 2017: 2 6 2 - - - - $1,000, 2022: 149 (D) - (D) - - - 2017: (D) 859 (D) - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2022: 205 145 58 48 280 84 50 118 2017: 312 199 94 89 258 183 163 106 $1,000, 2022: 2,302 3,549 1,154 4,232 10,092 1,814 1,186 1,213 2017: 2,730 4,130 834 2,416 3,060 4,603 2,050 1,211 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 11,230 24,479 19,897 88,167 36,041 21,598 23,724 10,282 2017: 8,749 20,756 8,867 27,147 11,861 25,154 12,575 11,429 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .....................farms, 2022: 117 103 4 1 79 18 6 71 2017: 135 87 4 1 58 24 9 42 $1,000, 2022: 985 1,052 (D) (D) 394 347 79 330 2017: 1,201 860 7 (D) 412 149 80 298 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 8,420 10,217 (D) (D) 4,985 19,269 13,165 4,655 2017: 8,893 9,883 1,648 (D) 7,099 6,212 8,910 7,107 : Amount from other Federal farm programs ...........farms, 2022: 101 57 54 47 226 68 46 62 2017: 265 163 91 89 238 178 162 94 $1,000, 2022: 1,317 2,497 (D) (D) 9,698 1,467 1,107 883 2017: 1,529 3,271 827 (D) 2,648 4,454 1,969 913 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 13,039 43,808 (D) (D) 42,910 21,579 24,069 14,238 2017: 5,770 20,065 9,087 (D) 11,128 25,023 12,157 9,713 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2022: - 1 - - - 1 1 - 2017: 5 11 2 2 1 1 1 3 $1,000, 2022: - (D) - - - (D) (D) - 2017: 25 380 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 299 Amount spent to repay CCC loans ...................farms, 2022: - 2 1 - - 2 - - 2017: 2 6 - - 3 6 - 2 $1,000, 2022: - (D) (D) - - (D) - - 2017: (D) 312 - - 132 955 - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 5. Federal Government Payments and Commodity Credit Corporation Loans: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2022: 422 61 149 51 57 79 171 200 2017: 369 35 138 99 177 249 192 233 $1,000, 2022: 9,712 1,568 9,427 1,487 2,432 3,843 7,777 5,183 2017: 7,066 295 2,929 1,163 3,919 4,319 7,319 5,063 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 23,014 25,697 63,271 29,162 42,660 48,643 45,481 25,914 2017: 19,150 8,416 21,222 11,744 22,144 17,346 38,120 21,731 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .....................farms, 2022: 264 - 74 7 25 35 77 116 2017: 205 2 60 6 25 29 57 125 $1,000, 2022: 1,288 - 398 9 396 543 625 1,087 2017: 927 (D) 367 114 551 560 463 2,116 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 4,880 - 5,373 1,277 15,850 15,516 8,119 9,367 2017: 4,524 (D) 6,124 19,076 22,024 19,309 8,117 16,932 : Amount from other Federal farm programs ...........farms, 2022: 207 61 105 45 34 56 126 132 2017: 259 35 119 98 166 246 188 207 $1,000, 2022: 8,424 1,568 9,030 1,478 2,035 3,300 7,152 4,096 2017: 6,139 (D) 2,561 1,048 3,369 3,759 6,856 2,947 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 40,694 25,697 85,998 32,851 59,863 58,924 56,763 31,031 2017: 23,702 (D) 21,523 10,696 20,294 15,281 36,470 14,236 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2022: 2 - 11 - - 2 3 - 2017: 7 - 6 - 4 12 8 3 $1,000, 2022: (D) - 2,013 - - (D) 1,184 - 2017: 659 - 912 - 83 1,147 1,434 (D) Amount spent to repay CCC loans ...................farms, 2022: 2 - 2 - 6 1 2 4 2017: 7 - 7 - 2 - 9 10 $1,000, 2022: (D) - (D) - 90 (D) (D) 3 2017: 945 - 491 - (D) - 2,099 409 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GOVERNMENT PAYMENTS : : Total received ......................................farms, 2022: 67 34 164 1 74 156 6 83 2017: 121 77 175 - 80 360 8 152 $1,000, 2022: 3,471 236 7,066 (D) 897 4,192 (D) 2,303 2017: 2,365 900 10,617 - 865 4,456 84 1,591 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 51,803 6,944 43,084 (D) 12,128 26,875 (D) 27,744 2017: 19,548 11,682 60,666 - 10,817 12,377 10,520 10,470 : Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .....................farms, 2022: - - 118 - 37 7 - 15 2017: 2 3 118 - 36 14 - 17 $1,000, 2022: - - 3,318 - 128 (D) - 105 2017: (D) 6 4,465 - 298 169 - 280 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: - - 28,119 - 3,455 (D) - 6,992 2017: (D) 2,136 37,841 - 8,278 12,046 - 16,475 : Amount from other Federal farm programs ...........farms, 2022: 67 34 95 1 38 151 6 71 2017: 119 76 138 - 66 356 8 148 $1,000, 2022: 3,471 236 3,748 (D) 770 (D) (D) 2,198 2017: (D) 893 6,151 - 567 4,287 84 1,311 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 51,803 6,944 39,450 (D) 20,253 (D) (D) 30,956 2017: (D) 11,752 44,575 - 8,596 12,042 10,520 8,860 : COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION LOANS : : Total ...............................................farms, 2022: - - 2 - 1 2 - - 2017: - - 2 - - 14 - - $1,000, 2022: - - (D) - (D) (D) - - 2017: - - (D) - - 183 - - Amount spent to repay CCC loans ...................farms, 2022: - - - - 1 - - - 2017: - - 4 - - 3 - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - (D) - - - 2017: - - (D) - - 53 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources ..............farms, 2022: 7,733 197 96 207 140 74 353 2017: 8,879 293 77 183 124 121 484 $1,000, 2022: 327,387 4,243 1,117 6,481 2,242 4,185 21,952 2017: 266,869 8,158 1,037 3,419 1,172 5,183 18,070 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 42,336 21,539 11,630 31,308 16,017 56,557 62,187 2017: 30,056 27,842 13,471 18,685 9,456 42,832 37,334 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2022: 1,707 57 16 48 28 15 104 2017: 1,914 85 13 58 33 15 106 $1,000, 2022: 65,446 1,017 157 534 263 (D) 4,433 2017: 57,668 1,520 102 807 616 172 3,037 : Gross cash rent or share payments .................farms, 2022: 3,629 80 57 76 71 23 162 2017: 3,904 103 35 68 55 42 233 $1,000, 2022: 116,760 1,460 407 4,049 842 1,874 9,848 2017: 95,083 933 522 689 321 1,752 9,634 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2022: 426 1 7 6 - 13 - 2017: 441 2 10 - - 42 2 $1,000, 2022: 10,515 (D) 298 37 - 272 - 2017: 7,393 (D) 174 - - 819 (D) : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2022: 200 18 2 8 8 2 2 2017: 176 11 1 6 1 - 8 $1,000, 2022: 16,909 444 (D) (D) 199 (D) (D) 2017: 9,242 3,134 (D) 126 (D) - 34 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2022: 2,432 28 18 32 43 21 148 2017: 3,044 37 21 34 34 22 182 $1,000, 2022: 27,917 408 15 130 105 28 2,429 2017: 23,329 290 (D) 84 31 (D) 1,561 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2022: 966 13 5 15 20 26 50 2017: 805 14 1 23 3 22 49 $1,000, 2022: 51,896 (D) (D) 135 559 1,382 2,722 2017: 39,878 (D) (D) 950 (D) 2,054 2,383 : Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2022: 129 - - 14 3 - 4 2017: 112 - - 3 6 2 3 $1,000, 2022: 982 - - (D) 4 - (D) 2017: 908 - - 40 160 (D) (D) Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 7,613 - - (D) 1,367 - (D) 2017: 8,107 - - 13,268 26,610 (D) (D) : Other farm-related income sources .................farms, 2022: 870 41 12 30 6 11 55 2017: 1,438 91 15 51 6 16 95 $1,000, 2022: 36,961 645 137 1,508 270 494 2,459 2017: 33,368 2,075 202 723 (D) 353 1,416 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources ..............farms, 2022: 94 31 213 291 115 64 49 2017: 86 25 303 345 116 102 62 $1,000, 2022: 2,655 59 5,647 7,982 2,684 1,646 3,341 2017: 1,385 207 2,534 7,048 1,778 1,507 1,486 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 28,247 1,897 26,509 27,430 23,341 25,725 68,177 2017: 16,109 8,285 8,364 20,430 15,323 14,774 23,972 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2022: 36 2 27 47 34 24 15 2017: 26 5 29 65 21 16 17 $1,000, 2022: 984 (D) (D) 1,304 352 951 2,163 2017: 423 4 60 706 198 369 1,005 : Gross cash rent or share payments .................farms, 2022: 49 17 63 140 34 11 20 2017: 38 12 77 187 50 30 28 $1,000, 2022: 787 24 369 3,827 168 170 785 2017: 567 174 212 4,821 438 435 310 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2022: 2 4 94 17 37 - - 2017: 1 1 144 2 22 - - $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 4,339 8 1,112 - - 2017: (D) (D) 1,798 (D) 658 - - : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2022: 4 2 9 5 10 - - 2017: 1 3 11 4 2 1 - $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 208 286 280 - - 2017: (D) 5 73 (D) (D) (D) - : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2022: 31 7 59 66 19 38 22 2017: 18 2 60 82 22 58 18 $1,000, 2022: 187 2 39 376 4 153 102 2017: 87 (D) 24 223 19 167 84 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2022: 8 2 15 31 9 9 5 2017: - 2 11 15 4 19 7 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 339 1,767 132 249 (D) 2017: - (D) 86 338 (D) 384 80 : Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2022: - - 1 8 - 3 - 2017: 7 - 5 - 3 - - $1,000, 2022: - - (D) 27 - (D) - 2017: (D) - 5 - (Z) - - Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: - - (D) 3,344 - (D) - 2017: (D) - 1,017 - 105 - - : Other farm-related income sources .................farms, 2022: 24 3 31 48 10 3 2 2017: 21 5 34 54 27 15 4 $1,000, 2022: 421 1 211 386 636 (D) (D) 2017: 264 (D) 278 916 253 (D) 7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources ..............farms, 2022: 619 187 267 27 102 117 88 2017: 646 168 270 32 92 119 83 $1,000, 2022: 26,659 7,037 25,102 1,963 1,783 6,210 8,059 2017: 22,638 7,339 18,166 513 1,276 3,634 4,683 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 43,068 37,631 94,016 72,688 17,476 53,078 91,582 2017: 35,043 43,682 67,282 16,026 13,866 30,540 56,427 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2022: 186 28 65 10 2 22 11 2017: 174 38 68 2 6 27 17 $1,000, 2022: 7,839 864 10,366 1,645 (D) 1,233 586 2017: 5,079 659 4,950 (D) 27 277 496 : Gross cash rent or share payments .................farms, 2022: 298 111 141 11 60 49 45 2017: 287 86 115 16 59 53 49 $1,000, 2022: 7,230 3,297 6,460 (D) 464 491 4,003 2017: 4,745 1,918 5,788 (D) 420 457 2,296 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2022: 5 2 - - 28 8 - 2017: 7 - - - 21 6 - $1,000, 2022: 39 (D) - - 789 (D) - 2017: (D) - - - 416 58 - : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2022: 26 3 2 - 3 13 - 2017: 14 1 2 - 3 7 - $1,000, 2022: 1,119 130 (D) - (D) 3,698 - 2017: 163 (D) (D) - (D) 2,559 - : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2022: 155 51 115 8 27 46 21 2017: 190 45 136 16 18 50 26 $1,000, 2022: 2,064 252 3,561 29 21 181 265 2017: 2,220 200 2,845 112 138 101 1,423 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2022: 49 29 32 - 8 13 16 2017: 42 27 19 1 9 6 6 $1,000, 2022: 1,871 1,246 3,284 - 313 452 1,841 2017: 6,246 3,310 1,556 (D) 183 19 226 : Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2022: 16 6 3 - 1 - 4 2017: 3 5 4 - 2 - - $1,000, 2022: 196 (D) (D) - (D) - 88 2017: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - - Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 12,259 (D) (D) - (D) - 22,000 2017: (D) (D) (D) - (D) - - : Other farm-related income sources .................farms, 2022: 92 10 19 2 7 7 15 2017: 128 12 50 - 5 10 20 $1,000, 2022: 6,301 1,199 1,408 (D) (D) (D) 1,277 2017: 4,153 830 2,970 - 87 163 242 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources ..............farms, 2022: 268 230 156 197 283 258 177 207 2017: 294 247 180 232 340 281 217 248 $1,000, 2022: 4,371 7,105 2,726 20,284 9,203 7,424 13,194 4,084 2017: 4,808 3,438 1,241 11,176 8,742 6,833 10,693 4,667 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 16,311 30,889 17,476 102,964 32,520 28,777 74,543 19,731 2017: 16,353 13,918 6,897 48,174 25,711 24,317 49,276 18,818 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2022: 57 51 45 56 40 34 54 30 2017: 71 43 55 55 33 63 49 45 $1,000, 2022: 618 1,564 510 4,374 510 999 3,702 452 2017: 1,202 896 490 3,239 459 1,041 2,454 642 : Gross cash rent or share payments .................farms, 2022: 114 125 70 111 142 94 91 68 2017: 125 141 62 91 170 102 77 80 $1,000, 2022: 2,222 3,461 1,522 8,983 1,457 3,409 3,821 880 2017: 2,054 1,811 355 5,677 2,039 3,191 4,690 862 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2022: - 1 2 1 31 5 - 74 2017: - - - 1 27 - - 78 $1,000, 2022: - (D) (D) (D) 345 11 - 1,196 2017: - - - (D) 681 - - 1,247 : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2022: 1 - 1 2 3 9 2 16 2017: 4 4 2 - 12 3 - 10 $1,000, 2022: (D) - (D) (D) 43 5 (D) 575 2017: (D) 130 (D) - 101 27 - 375 : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2022: 95 82 33 90 71 109 80 19 2017: 92 93 49 140 129 141 123 61 $1,000, 2022: 505 748 282 544 138 777 4,095 13 2017: 302 185 131 1,456 155 366 2,102 45 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2022: 21 33 11 9 98 38 20 15 2017: 32 21 11 8 81 26 12 9 $1,000, 2022: 268 998 151 5,098 6,343 978 1,108 129 2017: 349 309 98 (D) 4,409 1,220 (D) 509 : Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2022: 2 4 1 - 9 9 - - 2017: 2 3 2 1 7 4 1 6 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) (D) - 25 31 - - 2017: (D) 31 (D) (D) 62 9 (D) (Z) Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: (D) (D) (D) - 2,794 3,406 - - 2017: (D) 10,457 (D) (D) 8,828 2,351 (D) 42 : Other farm-related income sources .................farms, 2022: 31 18 15 16 22 18 18 17 2017: 48 13 20 24 46 31 47 48 $1,000, 2022: 749 305 237 1,258 343 1,215 (D) 840 2017: 900 75 161 748 836 979 1,134 987 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources ..............farms, 2022: 386 96 128 78 182 208 158 155 2017: 434 99 131 129 193 283 187 166 $1,000, 2022: 8,770 1,644 15,071 3,802 9,340 18,189 7,104 4,643 2017: 9,474 1,794 4,121 4,668 6,078 20,000 5,998 2,357 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 22,720 17,121 117,745 48,747 51,321 87,446 44,961 29,953 2017: 21,830 18,126 31,456 36,188 31,494 70,670 32,075 14,201 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2022: 34 12 24 14 61 48 14 35 2017: 48 26 15 47 56 73 26 30 $1,000, 2022: 449 98 221 258 2,127 1,301 403 608 2017: 2,407 357 237 2,517 2,094 3,456 1,010 413 : Gross cash rent or share payments .................farms, 2022: 231 37 68 28 72 112 94 72 2017: 255 36 60 39 91 155 75 70 $1,000, 2022: 2,231 417 1,210 2,481 3,693 10,456 3,847 3,324 2017: 2,076 590 679 953 1,118 11,401 2,685 1,291 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2022: 33 - 6 - - - 16 2 2017: 37 4 1 - - - 5 - $1,000, 2022: 417 - (D) - - - 1,056 (D) 2017: 637 94 (D) - - - 193 - : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2022: 6 7 7 - 1 - 3 4 2017: 12 2 - 2 - - 6 - $1,000, 2022: 90 8 9,008 - (D) - (D) 48 2017: 94 (D) - (D) - - 5 - : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2022: 98 32 37 51 75 124 45 26 2017: 111 24 60 68 83 140 92 62 $1,000, 2022: 291 56 160 337 370 4,099 82 153 2017: 438 462 205 705 (D) 2,610 398 292 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2022: 56 14 43 8 23 28 26 23 2017: 63 3 56 18 8 15 56 8 $1,000, 2022: 2,613 360 4,291 217 2,370 1,126 1,412 265 2017: 2,898 (D) 2,770 192 1,432 463 1,579 (D) : Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2022: 10 3 4 - - 7 3 4 2017: 4 1 3 1 1 - 7 3 $1,000, 2022: 214 9 (D) - - (D) (D) (D) 2017: 61 (D) (D) (D) (D) - 56 (D) Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 21,414 3,019 (D) - - (D) (D) (D) 2017: 15,259 (D) (D) (D) (D) - 8,000 (D) : Other farm-related income sources .................farms, 2022: 40 22 17 5 14 8 20 18 2017: 46 24 5 11 29 60 22 33 $1,000, 2022: 2,465 696 148 510 (D) (D) 241 240 2017: 862 245 176 210 850 2,070 71 160 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 6. Income From Farm-Related Sources: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total income from farm-related sources ..............farms, 2022: 129 184 135 10 111 432 65 169 2017: 194 202 155 11 125 502 79 219 $1,000, 2022: 9,032 8,930 9,876 190 1,341 15,121 813 4,082 2017: 10,289 5,201 8,339 85 2,873 17,935 773 4,050 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 70,015 48,535 73,158 19,037 12,078 35,002 12,513 24,155 2017: 53,038 25,749 53,801 7,750 22,987 35,727 9,790 18,493 : Customwork and other agricultural services ........farms, 2022: 34 63 11 1 10 141 7 54 2017: 55 37 26 - 34 151 3 52 $1,000, 2022: 3,012 2,810 327 (D) 101 4,958 58 1,028 2017: 2,423 1,862 (D) - (D) 8,405 (D) 811 : Gross cash rent or share payments .................farms, 2022: 54 88 88 2 72 165 43 70 2017: 78 91 81 2 46 191 64 99 $1,000, 2022: 1,844 1,329 4,833 (D) 751 5,968 395 1,401 2017: 2,673 761 3,370 (D) 541 6,684 422 2,400 : Sales of forest products, excluding Christmas : trees, short rotation woody crops, and : maple products ...................................farms, 2022: - 2 - 7 7 3 11 1 2017: 4 1 - 3 8 2 3 7 $1,000, 2022: - (D) - 182 10 (D) 310 (D) 2017: 46 (D) - 33 34 (D) (D) 118 : Agri-tourism and recreational services ............farms, 2022: 5 4 2 - 3 3 4 - 2017: 2 8 - - 4 20 3 6 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) (D) - 111 (D) (D) - 2017: (D) 165 - - (D) 35 1 (D) : Patronage dividends and refunds : from cooperatives ................................farms, 2022: 49 46 51 - 20 185 5 54 2017: 43 51 65 3 23 220 1 99 $1,000, 2022: 862 164 2,414 - 39 1,166 1 274 2017: 439 238 800 (D) 91 1,519 (D) 136 : Crop and livestock insurance payments .............farms, 2022: 15 10 22 - 8 62 1 27 2017: 24 10 9 - 11 35 - 9 $1,000, 2022: 1,849 (D) 1,636 - 186 2,284 (D) 878 2017: 2,807 (D) 906 - 374 502 - (D) : Amount from State and local government : agricultural program payments ....................farms, 2022: - 2 2 - - 5 - 1 2017: 1 - 1 - - 8 1 12 $1,000, 2022: - (D) (D) - - 34 - (D) 2017: (D) - (D) - - (D) (D) 137 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: - (D) (D) - - 6,800 - (D) 2017: (D) - (D) - - (D) (D) 11,382 : Other farm-related income sources .................farms, 2022: 25 29 19 - 5 38 4 23 2017: 52 49 33 3 22 70 11 32 $1,000, 2022: (D) 4,107 608 - 144 691 6 (D) 2017: 1,898 2,014 2,657 (D) 80 780 (D) 341 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 5,697 187 33 138 74 56 325 workers: 42,990 1,133 82 504 207 192 3,142 $1,000 payroll: 1,043,118 27,753 1,156 4,391 2,148 2,424 56,007 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .............................farms: 3,883 139 30 99 62 43 199 workers: 7,864 240 (D) 157 113 80 435 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 933 23 2 23 10 7 56 workers: 6,058 147 (D) 147 (D) 45 348 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 881 25 1 16 2 6 70 workers: 29,068 746 (D) 200 (D) 67 2,359 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 3,478 99 18 59 42 20 210 workers: 21,741 641 37 149 93 84 1,248 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .........................farms: 2,514 73 17 52 40 15 151 workers: 4,996 120 (D) 98 (D) (D) 314 5 to 9 workers ....................................farms: 481 11 1 6 1 1 27 workers: 3,054 67 (D) (D) (D) (D) 183 10 workers or more ................................farms: 483 15 - 1 1 4 32 workers: 13,691 454 - (D) (D) 44 751 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 3,988 131 24 114 45 43 234 workers: 21,249 492 45 355 114 108 1,894 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) ...........................farms: 3,038 108 23 94 37 39 149 workers: 5,947 194 (D) 175 62 78 307 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 506 17 1 8 7 2 29 workers: 3,119 101 (D) 52 (D) (D) 163 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 444 6 - 12 1 2 56 workers: 12,183 197 - 128 (D) (D) 1,424 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 1,709 56 9 24 29 13 91 workers: 9,563 327 18 38 51 64 360 $1,000 payroll: 428,753 14,197 344 721 640 378 12,859 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 2,219 88 15 79 32 36 115 workers: 5,610 194 25 216 72 78 354 $1,000 payroll: 37,284 1,072 99 839 504 737 2,505 : Reported both - workers working : 150 days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 1,769 43 9 35 13 7 119 150 days or more, workers: 12,178 314 19 111 42 20 888 less than 150 days, workers: 15,639 298 20 139 42 30 1,540 $1,000 payroll: 577,082 12,483 712 2,830 1,004 1,309 40,643 : Total migrant workers .....................................farms: 746 9 - 5 1 2 80 workers: 5,155 43 - 24 (D) (D) 345 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ............farms: 714 9 - 5 1 2 76 workers: 5,013 43 - 24 (D) (D) 341 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .........................................farms: 32 - - - - - 4 workers: 142 - - - - - 4 : Unpaid workers ............................................farms: 8,421 499 115 397 144 86 356 workers: 21,358 1,162 277 1,137 399 231 1,006 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 84 16 129 249 90 64 29 workers: 421 189 508 1,188 693 231 184 $1,000 payroll: 7,680 718 3,918 22,013 15,191 5,096 3,813 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .............................farms: 55 10 98 195 67 52 17 workers: 116 (D) 193 418 157 100 (D) 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 17 1 18 28 12 8 10 workers: 100 (D) 110 181 78 42 71 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 12 5 13 26 11 4 2 workers: 205 158 205 589 458 89 (D) : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 53 7 65 109 64 40 18 workers: 177 72 178 491 302 104 57 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .........................farms: 39 2 53 86 57 33 17 workers: (D) (D) 102 173 134 54 (D) 5 to 9 workers ....................................farms: 13 2 12 13 4 6 - workers: 98 (D) 76 83 26 (D) - 10 workers or more ................................farms: 1 3 - 10 3 1 1 workers: (D) 54 - 235 142 (D) (D) : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 67 15 98 202 53 47 24 workers: 244 117 330 697 391 127 127 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) ...........................farms: 50 10 83 162 37 41 13 workers: (D) (D) 173 309 67 59 (D) 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 15 2 7 24 10 4 10 workers: 115 (D) 35 150 56 (D) 59 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 2 3 8 16 6 2 1 workers: (D) 72 122 238 268 (D) (D) : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 17 1 31 47 37 17 5 workers: 50 (D) 67 189 87 42 (D) $1,000 payroll: 1,923 (D) 1,185 4,929 2,043 1,646 270 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 31 9 64 140 26 24 11 workers: 66 (D) 140 337 76 42 (D) $1,000 payroll: 762 (D) 979 2,598 268 204 177 : Reported both - workers working : 150 days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 36 6 34 62 27 23 13 150 days or more, workers: 127 70 111 302 215 62 48 less than 150 days, workers: 178 93 190 360 315 85 104 $1,000 payroll: 4,994 631 1,754 14,487 12,880 3,246 3,367 : Total migrant workers .....................................farms: 23 3 2 35 9 5 4 workers: 113 3 (D) 121 182 (D) 40 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ............farms: 20 3 2 33 9 5 4 workers: 102 3 (D) (D) 182 (D) 40 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .........................................farms: 3 - - 2 - - - workers: 11 - - (D) - - - : Unpaid workers ............................................farms: 77 58 361 298 124 57 40 workers: 131 152 931 814 290 158 76 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 441 121 251 29 52 73 73 workers: 5,161 759 3,198 223 117 209 1,085 $1,000 payroll: 129,213 11,164 99,637 6,172 1,921 3,712 35,162 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .............................farms: 246 87 149 12 51 58 54 workers: 492 194 317 19 (D) 106 118 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 88 21 38 8 - 14 4 workers: 594 122 257 52 - (D) 24 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 107 13 64 9 1 1 15 workers: 4,075 443 2,624 152 (D) (D) 943 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 287 80 180 22 17 46 45 workers: 2,526 263 1,983 99 26 99 749 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .........................farms: 156 70 106 11 17 42 29 workers: 341 150 207 21 26 69 (D) 5 to 9 workers ....................................farms: 58 5 24 7 - 3 2 workers: 367 27 142 36 - (D) (D) 10 workers or more ................................farms: 73 5 50 4 - 1 14 workers: 1,818 86 1,634 42 - (D) 672 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 302 77 156 22 42 47 43 workers: 2,635 496 1,215 124 91 110 336 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) ...........................farms: 221 51 99 11 41 44 32 workers: 465 103 187 25 (D) 91 57 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 43 18 26 8 1 3 3 workers: 269 107 148 48 (D) 19 21 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 38 8 31 3 - - 8 workers: 1,901 286 880 51 - - 258 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 139 44 95 7 10 26 30 workers: 957 94 956 16 15 40 352 $1,000 payroll: 44,369 2,230 50,630 677 152 1,133 21,391 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 154 41 71 7 35 27 28 workers: 387 113 170 25 72 58 56 $1,000 payroll: 2,052 835 1,345 154 148 276 246 : Reported both - workers working : 150 days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 148 36 85 15 7 20 15 150 days or more, workers: 1,569 169 1,027 83 11 59 397 less than 150 days, workers: 2,248 383 1,045 99 19 52 280 $1,000 payroll: 82,793 8,100 47,662 5,341 1,620 2,303 13,525 : Total migrant workers .....................................farms: 94 9 47 8 - 6 18 workers: 1,042 28 186 37 - 12 228 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ............farms: 93 8 47 8 - 6 18 workers: (D) (D) 186 37 - 12 228 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .........................................farms: 1 1 - - - - - workers: (D) (D) - - - - - : Unpaid workers ............................................farms: 838 157 138 18 93 72 79 workers: 2,018 514 382 45 197 177 176 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 173 167 118 187 152 183 177 102 workers: 965 1,461 438 2,505 464 1,360 2,209 379 $1,000 payroll: 16,250 20,859 5,845 105,133 5,489 30,160 80,869 3,679 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .............................farms: 119 112 89 115 127 116 94 91 workers: 230 213 173 218 278 242 195 171 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 34 19 25 23 20 36 38 5 workers: 213 137 177 160 119 240 229 35 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 20 36 4 49 5 31 45 6 workers: 522 1,111 88 2,127 67 878 1,785 173 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 93 85 63 151 73 127 136 51 workers: 456 420 165 1,744 145 645 1,450 160 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .........................farms: 61 64 57 93 70 81 82 46 workers: 119 147 116 155 (D) 166 164 (D) 5 to 9 workers ....................................farms: 23 11 5 20 2 28 16 2 workers: 156 64 (D) 147 (D) 173 107 (D) 10 workers or more ................................farms: 9 10 1 38 1 18 38 3 workers: 181 209 (D) 1,442 (D) 306 1,179 77 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 118 132 82 99 125 121 106 73 workers: 509 1,041 273 761 319 715 759 219 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) ...........................farms: 95 90 62 61 113 92 70 63 workers: 174 165 (D) 111 230 172 165 113 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 20 12 18 16 9 15 25 7 workers: (D) 84 114 105 53 87 154 46 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 3 30 2 22 3 14 11 3 workers: (D) 792 (D) 545 36 456 440 60 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 55 35 36 88 27 62 71 29 workers: 258 91 66 967 52 289 831 44 $1,000 payroll: 7,546 1,591 1,256 63,379 791 8,935 49,048 454 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 80 82 55 36 79 56 41 51 workers: 199 231 144 177 178 121 118 110 $1,000 payroll: 738 1,596 712 884 860 330 521 657 : Reported both - workers working : 150 days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 38 50 27 63 46 65 65 22 150 days or more, workers: 198 329 99 777 93 356 619 116 less than 150 days, workers: 310 810 129 584 141 594 641 109 $1,000 payroll: 7,966 17,672 3,876 40,870 3,838 20,895 31,300 2,568 : Total migrant workers .....................................farms: 5 24 8 23 4 18 51 3 workers: 17 120 60 142 8 163 256 (D) : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ............farms: 5 23 8 17 2 18 51 1 workers: 17 (D) 60 130 (D) 163 256 (D) : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .........................................farms: - 1 - 6 2 - - 2 workers: - (D) - 12 (D) - - (D) : Unpaid workers ............................................farms: 337 203 275 137 254 271 123 422 workers: 977 525 726 312 743 711 266 977 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 195 90 75 74 155 168 108 100 workers: 675 204 387 581 1,830 2,060 418 340 $1,000 payroll: 7,686 2,526 8,298 21,071 18,676 66,207 6,435 5,250 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .............................farms: 158 83 56 47 72 94 80 83 workers: 301 153 138 87 162 208 208 150 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 26 7 13 16 23 33 25 9 workers: 172 51 93 110 137 201 168 54 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 11 - 6 11 60 41 3 8 workers: 202 - 156 384 1,531 1,651 42 136 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 81 54 49 45 100 130 53 47 workers: 175 111 181 402 480 1,191 145 158 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .........................farms: 75 51 43 30 65 83 48 39 workers: 145 94 106 54 124 168 112 71 5 to 9 workers ....................................farms: 6 3 2 4 23 31 5 7 workers: 30 17 (D) 26 153 197 33 (D) 10 workers or more ................................farms: - - 4 11 12 16 - 1 workers: - - (D) 322 203 826 - (D) : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 164 52 57 51 136 107 83 76 workers: 500 93 206 179 1,350 869 273 182 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) ...........................farms: 149 50 49 41 73 63 67 68 workers: 289 (D) 115 77 166 129 175 113 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 6 2 2 7 13 25 14 5 workers: 43 (D) (D) 50 84 165 (D) 30 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 9 - 6 3 50 19 2 3 workers: 168 - (D) 52 1,100 575 (D) 39 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 31 38 18 23 19 61 25 24 workers: 54 74 44 208 56 399 66 90 $1,000 payroll: 956 969 1,006 11,271 1,344 14,602 1,879 2,153 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 114 36 26 29 55 38 55 53 workers: 248 70 55 75 187 136 168 101 $1,000 payroll: 1,863 420 679 267 1,025 2,250 1,714 734 : Reported both - workers working : 150 days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 50 16 31 22 81 69 28 23 150 days or more, workers: 121 37 137 194 424 792 79 68 less than 150 days, workers: 252 23 151 104 1,163 733 105 81 $1,000 payroll: 4,868 1,137 6,613 9,533 16,306 49,355 2,841 2,362 : Total migrant workers .....................................farms: 3 3 1 22 22 57 9 2 workers: 3 5 (D) 144 70 671 44 (D) : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ............farms: 3 3 1 19 22 56 4 2 workers: 3 5 (D) 99 70 (D) 4 (D) : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .........................................farms: - - - 3 - 1 5 - workers: - - - 45 - (D) 40 - : Unpaid workers ............................................farms: 354 135 57 53 141 127 151 175 workers: 822 301 125 146 337 310 365 499 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 7. Hired Farm Labor - Workers and Payroll: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hired farm labor ..........................................farms: 145 139 108 3 87 345 30 102 workers: 826 819 1,573 6 629 2,958 76 401 $1,000 payroll: 37,348 23,116 31,436 14 10,470 89,869 561 6,582 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .............................farms: 99 97 60 3 50 211 26 78 workers: 203 196 119 6 88 420 47 175 5 to 9 workers ........................................farms: 34 25 27 - 20 67 4 16 workers: 196 174 190 - 120 465 29 104 10 workers or more ....................................farms: 12 17 21 - 17 67 - 8 workers: 427 449 1,264 - 421 2,073 - 122 : Workers by days worked: : 150 days or more ........................................farms: 105 78 79 - 61 260 13 63 workers: 535 482 671 - 369 2,069 26 183 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) .........................farms: 80 54 47 - 40 172 13 54 workers: 157 123 92 - 82 344 26 116 5 to 9 workers ....................................farms: 16 13 18 - 7 37 - 6 workers: 87 85 102 - 37 261 - 31 10 workers or more ................................farms: 9 11 14 - 14 51 - 3 workers: 291 274 477 - 250 1,464 - 36 : Less than 150 days ......................................farms: 91 102 78 3 55 193 22 76 workers: 291 337 902 6 260 889 50 218 Farms with- : 1 to 4 workers (see text) ...........................farms: 80 86 51 3 41 145 18 63 workers: 148 167 100 6 90 291 30 111 5 to 9 workers ......................................farms: 6 11 11 - 5 25 4 10 workers: 33 64 57 - 29 156 20 62 10 workers or more ..................................farms: 5 5 16 - 9 23 - 3 workers: 110 106 745 - 141 442 - 45 : Reported only workers working : 150 days or more .........................................farms: 54 37 30 - 32 152 8 26 workers: 253 230 189 - 108 1,382 15 63 $1,000 payroll: 20,595 12,232 7,870 - 2,148 55,176 (D) 1,610 : Reported only workers working : less than 150 days .......................................farms: 40 61 29 3 26 85 17 39 workers: 86 124 107 6 60 243 28 110 $1,000 payroll: 1,142 581 2,167 14 473 1,146 (D) 554 : Reported both - workers working : 150 days or more and workers : working less than 150 days ...............................farms: 51 41 49 - 29 108 5 37 150 days or more, workers: 282 252 482 - 261 687 11 120 less than 150 days, workers: 205 213 795 - 200 646 22 108 $1,000 payroll: 15,612 10,304 21,399 - 7,849 33,547 268 4,418 : Total migrant workers .....................................farms: 22 16 15 - 21 48 - 9 workers: 213 128 186 - 210 184 - 27 : Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor ............farms: 22 15 15 - 21 48 - 9 workers: 213 (D) 186 - 210 184 - 27 : Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only : contract labor .........................................farms: - 1 - - - - - - workers: - (D) - - - - - - : Unpaid workers ............................................farms: 175 199 81 24 66 418 68 168 workers: 450 387 239 86 152 1,053 172 404 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 2017: 24,996 1,304 232 757 395 288 1,177 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2022: 11,547,963 112,556 145,570 419,823 209,678 130,471 897,796 2017: 11,691,912 112,370 163,054 315,038 296,959 139,944 932,944 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2022: 505 99 636 418 594 544 831 2017: 468 86 703 416 752 486 793 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2022: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 2017: 24,996 1,304 232 757 395 288 1,177 $1,000, 2022: 48,610,483 1,472,632 400,586 1,155,756 580,472 358,345 3,402,095 2017: 33,513,086 1,068,726 252,734 615,413 427,362 270,955 2,373,575 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 2,124,863 1,289,520 1,749,283 1,150,006 1,644,398 1,493,103 3,147,174 2017: 1,340,738 819,575 1,089,369 812,963 1,081,929 940,817 2,016,632 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2022: 4,209 13,084 2,752 2,753 2,768 2,747 3,789 2017: 2,866 9,511 1,550 1,953 1,439 1,936 2,544 2022 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 1,300 58 8 81 14 19 103 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 1,091 33 8 39 24 23 59 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 1,951 52 6 100 24 15 126 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 5,883 214 60 329 104 64 311 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 5,555 348 72 248 71 60 189 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 2,930 294 24 103 47 29 66 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 2,186 95 32 73 51 15 109 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 969 30 15 20 10 8 34 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 1,012 18 4 12 8 7 84 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2022: 52,892,456 673,338 872,195 711,989 624,466 497,194 1,340,025 Proportion in farms .............................percent, 2022: 21.8 16.7 16.7 59.0 33.6 26.2 67.0 : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 5,785 568 22 367 32 10 335 acres: 27,849 2,793 147 1,555 152 72 1,603 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 6,977 441 63 285 69 83 299 acres: 152,698 6,947 1,696 6,044 1,875 2,030 6,113 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 881 19 26 37 28 14 35 acres: 50,791 1,131 1,476 2,117 1,531 818 1,986 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 1,133 16 15 34 18 41 42 acres: 91,750 1,288 1,217 2,819 1,490 3,338 3,536 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 960 17 9 31 33 11 39 acres: 111,409 2,000 1,083 3,878 3,751 1,246 4,488 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 927 7 14 27 25 18 41 acres: 146,182 1,127 2,288 4,191 3,871 2,850 6,658 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 517 12 9 34 18 3 13 acres: 102,688 2,377 1,781 6,860 3,519 610 2,598 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 432 16 3 24 11 7 12 acres: 103,105 3,917 678 5,689 2,564 1,676 2,815 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1,566 13 22 47 40 13 79 acres: 567,714 4,513 7,232 16,973 15,348 4,697 28,516 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 1,384 10 11 60 31 19 55 acres: 969,169 6,721 7,585 40,305 20,220 12,693 40,689 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1,048 11 20 32 21 8 50 acres: 1,441,051 15,310 24,808 46,628 30,408 9,857 70,020 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,267 12 15 27 27 13 81 acres: 7,783,557 64,432 95,579 282,764 124,949 90,584 728,774 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 6,673 672 27 215 25 28 385 acres: 32,421 3,246 200 959 120 188 1,712 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 7,337 460 71 178 77 95 319 acres: 164,793 7,933 1,748 3,907 2,019 2,548 7,193 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 950 31 11 25 13 22 29 acres: 55,060 1,838 681 1,447 749 1,293 1,696 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 1,277 45 7 29 38 35 55 acres: 104,089 3,556 529 2,532 3,097 2,837 4,517 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 1,019 17 17 41 38 20 23 acres: 118,050 1,966 2,054 4,806 4,269 2,266 2,641 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 915 2 13 36 20 7 26 acres: 143,855 (D) 1,992 5,767 3,237 1,124 4,212 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 528 7 6 17 11 7 22 acres: 104,441 (D) 1,203 3,384 2,231 1,386 4,497 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 493 9 7 17 14 8 19 acres: 117,049 2,138 1,558 4,128 3,234 1,875 4,432 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1,765 17 18 80 48 17 59 acres: 638,787 6,233 6,654 29,756 18,109 5,999 21,997 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 1,606 17 23 51 54 24 79 acres: 1,127,215 11,231 16,623 37,063 39,035 18,031 53,572 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 1,160 14 15 37 15 10 71 acres: 1,590,115 17,384 17,905 54,402 17,228 13,015 95,631 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,273 13 17 31 42 15 90 acres: 7,496,037 55,136 111,907 166,887 203,631 89,382 730,844 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2022: 15,823 746 137 695 288 188 657 2017: 17,338 888 137 489 314 220 728 acres, 2022: 5,623,516 42,862 15,981 180,641 80,192 76,672 363,334 2017: 5,894,676 62,860 16,912 181,486 108,279 82,097 397,718 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 13,037 662 119 471 256 129 561 2017: 15,028 819 123 382 261 162 661 acres, 2022: 4,370,363 32,982 14,039 60,578 61,633 58,997 323,793 2017: 4,576,077 58,686 15,340 75,400 82,328 61,303 345,521 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 2017: 190 90 1,213 1,109 348 189 151 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2022: 259,553 66,311 97,446 406,594 73,364 99,988 186,429 2017: 211,228 53,198 89,331 418,881 68,884 130,366 192,672 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2022: 1,279 614 122 455 230 680 1,680 2017: 1,112 591 74 378 198 690 1,276 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2022: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 2017: 190 90 1,213 1,109 348 189 151 $1,000, 2022: 922,925 136,161 598,465 1,985,652 417,485 342,983 383,185 2017: 534,509 76,259 449,851 1,220,964 329,533 267,597 258,293 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 4,546,428 1,260,748 749,956 2,223,574 1,308,731 2,333,216 3,452,115 2017: 2,813,206 847,323 370,858 1,100,960 946,934 1,415,857 1,710,551 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2022: 3,556 2,053 6,142 4,884 5,691 3,430 2,055 2017: 2,530 1,433 5,036 2,915 4,784 2,053 1,341 2022 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 1 4 44 71 24 1 4 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 5 11 19 40 9 3 2 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 6 18 64 86 17 20 7 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 23 27 322 173 102 30 23 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 58 23 228 210 94 23 26 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 38 14 67 124 29 31 15 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 34 2 46 95 29 20 15 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 10 5 4 52 10 14 14 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 28 4 4 42 5 5 5 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2022: 1,688,152 1,215,716 1,109,123 1,194,230 811,986 1,431,361 687,510 Proportion in farms .............................percent, 2022: 15.4 5.5 8.8 34.0 9.0 7.0 27.1 : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 37 39 128 284 46 13 3 acres: 194 (D) (D) 1,360 (D) (D) 6 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 64 21 384 296 107 25 27 acres: 1,219 623 8,100 5,195 2,347 (D) 729 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2 - 32 20 16 1 3 acres: (D) - 1,871 (D) 964 (D) (D) 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 7 5 52 26 21 10 10 acres: 527 (D) 4,150 2,082 1,746 786 821 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 10 12 58 23 32 9 5 acres: 1,105 1,266 6,527 2,776 3,735 990 502 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 8 6 28 31 23 8 3 acres: 1,145 938 4,233 4,953 3,595 1,223 (D) 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 5 16 1 6 6 2 acres: - 912 3,088 (D) 1,200 1,196 (D) 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1 5 20 22 6 9 1 acres: (D) 1,190 4,760 5,366 1,415 2,155 (D) : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 12 4 35 48 19 23 7 acres: 4,516 (D) 12,581 17,876 6,304 8,357 2,724 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 10 2 23 50 20 6 18 acres: 6,986 (D) 18,591 35,395 14,951 (D) 13,569 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 22 1 20 38 18 25 14 acres: 35,111 (D) 26,448 49,771 24,719 32,522 18,730 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 30 8 2 54 5 12 18 acres: 208,397 57,260 (D) 280,472 (D) 48,346 148,081 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 43 35 302 393 42 16 5 acres: 253 184 (D) 2,043 217 109 (D) 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 47 27 574 351 128 30 23 acres: 1,052 583 12,275 6,075 3,021 640 672 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 3 3 42 38 19 11 7 acres: (D) (D) 2,439 2,215 1,088 665 358 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 8 - 85 28 22 8 12 acres: 678 - 6,923 2,303 1,865 624 914 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 12 4 54 19 48 15 15 acres: 1,276 (D) 6,323 2,293 5,562 1,750 1,584 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 6 5 24 35 18 7 4 acres: 949 825 3,738 5,350 2,770 1,101 (D) 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1 4 23 16 7 3 6 acres: (D) 747 4,504 3,183 1,347 579 1,200 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1 1 29 5 14 18 3 acres: (D) (D) 6,799 1,171 3,446 4,224 718 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 7 1 41 74 10 16 17 acres: 2,750 (D) 14,325 25,946 3,596 5,948 5,828 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 18 3 32 57 24 14 18 acres: 13,239 2,385 21,545 40,981 16,404 9,443 12,684 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 21 - 6 53 10 37 21 acres: 28,815 - 6,793 69,344 13,038 51,781 29,297 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 23 7 1 40 6 14 20 acres: 161,616 47,335 (D) 257,977 16,530 53,502 138,744 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2022: 153 49 514 622 244 123 94 2017: 148 46 861 805 247 164 132 acres, 2022: 65,168 5,603 29,739 245,149 47,442 62,624 91,268 2017: 52,106 1,740 32,849 260,589 44,491 78,610 98,550 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 144 45 413 531 212 106 82 2017: 134 43 741 662 220 154 110 acres, 2022: 52,396 (D) 18,710 186,338 42,455 57,766 77,542 2017: 38,259 907 23,371 172,674 35,783 69,677 83,657 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 2017: 2,289 411 585 68 312 267 340 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2022: 277,388 416,460 657,664 206,127 66,230 113,930 296,190 2017: 274,952 366,499 643,346 149,411 56,556 147,837 358,454 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2022: 120 1,044 1,187 3,077 243 485 1,043 2017: 120 892 1,100 2,197 181 554 1,054 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2022: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 2017: 2,289 411 585 68 312 267 340 $1,000, 2022: 3,769,031 1,077,400 2,950,344 639,427 236,441 408,835 957,494 2017: 2,265,611 680,200 2,052,478 262,276 139,645 402,989 893,173 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 1,630,909 2,700,250 5,325,531 9,543,693 866,083 1,739,725 3,371,456 2017: 989,782 1,654,989 3,508,509 3,856,994 447,579 1,509,320 2,626,980 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2022: 13,588 2,587 4,486 3,102 3,570 3,588 3,233 2017: 8,240 1,856 3,190 1,755 2,469 2,726 2,492 2022 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 85 24 20 2 8 9 38 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 77 16 33 1 9 11 23 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 108 34 58 - 18 26 25 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 582 61 119 8 110 57 76 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 795 92 81 7 61 52 39 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 344 56 54 10 48 29 23 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 176 60 71 14 11 32 32 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 73 23 40 13 5 12 5 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 71 33 78 12 3 7 23 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2022: 375,709 1,129,084 1,641,990 1,128,413 1,572,678 3,150,149 1,967,995 Proportion in farms .............................percent, 2022: 73.8 36.9 40.1 18.3 4.2 3.6 15.1 : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 1,056 27 103 2 12 33 100 acres: 5,043 152 427 (D) 53 141 479 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 789 78 115 1 99 61 67 acres: 15,581 1,699 2,928 (D) 2,717 1,602 1,477 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 50 13 13 1 16 15 5 acres: 2,822 736 734 (D) 924 881 258 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 65 6 25 1 16 11 6 acres: 5,436 484 2,112 (D) 1,267 886 491 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 53 22 15 4 34 17 5 acres: 6,098 2,629 1,745 478 3,979 2,009 550 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 39 15 29 5 19 11 7 acres: 6,299 2,352 4,369 794 3,089 1,745 1,120 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 30 19 15 - 12 10 15 acres: 5,985 3,805 3,024 - 2,498 2,020 3,011 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 23 14 7 2 6 4 6 acres: 5,528 3,405 1,635 (D) 1,383 935 1,435 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 69 63 55 8 36 23 17 acres: 26,553 21,275 19,491 2,898 13,655 8,996 5,966 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 73 46 35 8 11 27 12 acres: 51,670 33,959 23,928 5,904 7,330 17,215 8,164 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 42 33 53 12 6 12 10 acres: 56,493 47,699 80,617 18,307 9,015 17,722 13,572 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 22 63 89 23 6 11 34 acres: 89,880 298,265 516,654 177,111 20,320 59,778 259,667 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 1,051 54 134 9 38 38 122 acres: 5,221 305 592 (D) (D) 178 651 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 728 62 125 4 120 55 80 acres: 16,238 1,155 2,717 117 3,354 1,424 1,560 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 69 10 13 - 16 16 1 acres: 3,878 605 719 - 918 982 (D) 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 70 18 18 1 19 13 15 acres: 5,731 1,466 1,470 (D) 1,508 1,121 1,335 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 58 7 22 1 26 13 12 acres: 6,715 815 2,483 (D) 3,020 1,485 1,388 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 45 22 11 2 19 15 12 acres: 6,932 3,527 1,731 (D) 3,023 2,335 1,890 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 20 12 13 3 18 7 3 acres: 3,941 2,376 2,594 576 3,596 1,375 (D) 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 26 13 15 2 5 10 4 acres: 6,263 3,109 3,516 (D) 1,156 2,354 930 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 76 59 56 6 29 30 24 acres: 27,712 21,444 20,655 (D) 9,842 11,160 8,413 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 87 57 30 14 10 38 19 acres: 60,968 42,724 22,638 9,297 6,628 25,894 13,475 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 39 47 69 9 9 13 18 acres: 54,125 63,360 98,198 13,515 12,253 19,038 22,444 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 20 50 79 17 3 19 30 acres: 77,228 225,613 486,033 122,993 (D) 80,491 305,743 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2022: 1,362 270 400 47 190 148 150 2017: 1,445 321 415 36 221 189 190 acres, 2022: 228,177 202,628 366,476 74,836 23,877 35,609 101,245 2017: 219,414 217,111 385,007 40,726 24,789 49,688 148,873 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 1,166 212 348 34 146 138 128 2017: 1,257 248 375 31 179 175 170 acres, 2022: 203,509 144,142 294,586 53,344 11,318 30,101 80,780 2017: 202,479 148,487 287,172 34,733 17,646 36,804 122,869 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 2017: 787 513 860 538 708 750 486 1,073 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2022: 276,073 275,247 199,547 212,600 545,260 262,180 180,152 107,727 2017: 228,382 279,578 183,177 188,353 537,428 333,522 171,643 139,705 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2022: 380 505 278 426 783 386 402 111 2017: 290 545 213 350 759 445 353 130 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2022: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 2017: 787 513 860 538 708 750 486 1,073 $1,000, 2022: 904,846 1,324,659 801,020 1,509,585 1,290,676 1,333,764 1,623,579 1,190,365 2017: 531,020 773,525 515,578 1,133,137 883,622 1,174,793 1,036,522 771,897 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 1,244,629 2,430,566 1,115,626 3,025,220 1,854,419 1,964,306 3,624,061 1,229,716 2017: 674,740 1,507,845 599,509 2,106,203 1,248,054 1,566,390 2,132,761 719,383 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2022: 3,278 4,813 4,014 7,101 2,367 5,087 9,012 11,050 2017: 2,325 2,767 2,815 6,016 1,644 3,522 6,039 5,525 2022 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 49 19 26 55 26 42 19 34 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 40 42 19 56 38 61 21 19 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 74 68 87 35 62 101 36 55 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 176 122 238 114 178 176 130 220 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 209 132 230 70 150 139 57 313 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 87 72 54 50 107 50 45 184 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 59 41 29 49 80 46 70 102 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 23 22 21 35 32 24 29 30 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 10 27 14 35 23 40 41 11 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2022: 424,332 1,192,934 358,252 466,742 5,425,594 699,955 382,367 792,036 Proportion in farms .............................percent, 2022: 65.1 23.1 55.7 45.5 10.0 37.5 47.1 13.6 : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 154 79 298 122 48 193 119 187 acres: 721 355 1,604 584 228 1,016 556 921 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 187 117 226 143 202 231 112 481 acres: 4,592 2,734 4,706 3,805 5,388 4,497 2,628 9,336 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 29 26 30 32 26 36 10 36 acres: 1,674 1,511 1,721 1,800 1,591 2,146 570 2,085 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 34 41 39 18 47 19 20 78 acres: 2,761 3,332 3,150 1,376 3,795 1,444 1,548 6,324 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 31 33 18 25 38 26 14 51 acres: 3,482 3,941 2,071 2,914 4,304 2,993 1,671 5,828 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 37 70 11 12 37 24 13 26 acres: 5,875 11,090 1,701 1,796 5,738 3,748 2,070 4,042 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 28 15 3 12 22 8 15 8 acres: 5,682 3,050 585 2,392 4,387 1,618 2,998 1,522 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 26 11 3 8 23 3 8 7 acres: 6,223 2,557 728 1,988 5,510 710 1,889 1,683 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 67 58 23 43 67 34 44 44 acres: 23,137 21,564 8,323 17,067 24,263 11,235 14,970 16,372 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 61 43 30 39 65 41 45 33 acres: 43,946 29,720 19,245 28,787 44,935 29,133 30,366 21,476 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 44 16 17 17 59 27 27 12 acres: 50,870 20,977 24,465 25,554 86,602 38,853 39,511 13,419 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 29 36 20 28 62 37 21 5 acres: 127,110 174,416 131,248 124,537 358,519 164,787 81,375 24,719 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 191 86 397 128 50 203 139 264 acres: 768 399 2,010 587 249 1,036 599 1,476 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 161 106 269 187 177 247 103 473 acres: 3,627 2,641 5,843 4,675 4,766 5,771 2,387 9,482 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 43 26 14 14 49 34 19 61 acres: 2,423 1,558 827 802 2,831 1,975 1,138 3,404 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 37 42 42 15 52 34 32 67 acres: 2,979 3,547 3,357 1,233 4,193 2,737 2,567 5,565 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 34 21 22 19 27 32 18 28 acres: 4,131 2,494 2,514 2,205 3,099 3,716 2,058 3,239 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 65 39 20 20 46 28 17 45 acres: 10,242 6,081 3,147 3,113 7,081 4,409 2,757 7,065 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 12 15 17 28 27 9 9 24 acres: 2,450 2,856 3,441 5,465 5,463 1,835 1,805 4,663 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 30 18 9 15 21 3 8 3 acres: 7,209 4,339 2,229 3,540 4,929 755 1,977 680 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 88 59 24 43 83 35 58 55 acres: 31,544 21,084 8,722 16,073 29,802 12,804 20,431 18,858 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 66 51 17 28 55 50 45 31 acres: 49,012 35,525 12,319 19,314 38,206 36,132 32,732 18,835 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 46 15 13 16 48 35 21 15 acres: 58,636 20,622 17,461 21,948 72,320 42,055 28,474 19,285 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 14 35 16 25 73 40 17 7 acres: 55,361 178,432 121,307 109,398 364,489 220,297 74,718 47,153 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2022: 582 427 494 324 535 486 300 650 2017: 571 385 521 348 516 536 342 702 acres, 2022: 114,176 203,276 27,426 140,588 171,167 182,195 150,930 55,698 2017: 132,085 171,002 28,323 125,264 180,642 228,278 134,555 62,242 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 466 291 432 290 435 454 276 465 2017: 501 309 470 327 424 505 323 559 acres, 2022: 74,567 165,603 19,873 125,314 123,368 171,192 132,964 36,706 2017: 89,591 143,429 23,549 119,358 109,775 202,560 129,291 45,556 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 2017: 1,041 351 197 276 454 620 446 422 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2022: 324,990 131,616 249,015 104,847 166,920 308,562 344,412 327,714 2017: 349,532 173,956 200,435 134,911 196,046 267,567 381,587 319,789 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2022: 329 430 1,137 458 466 680 830 735 2017: 336 496 1,017 489 432 432 856 758 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2022: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 2017: 1,041 351 197 276 454 620 446 422 $1,000, 2022: 1,125,806 519,461 702,058 599,679 908,782 1,913,830 1,087,091 860,397 2017: 888,376 439,442 393,580 492,526 816,040 1,214,391 793,469 530,290 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 1,138,328 1,697,584 3,205,743 2,618,687 2,538,496 4,215,485 2,619,497 1,929,142 2017: 853,388 1,251,971 1,997,866 1,784,513 1,797,444 1,958,696 1,779,079 1,256,611 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2022: 3,464 3,947 2,819 5,720 5,444 6,202 3,156 2,625 2017: 2,542 2,526 1,964 3,651 4,162 4,539 2,079 1,658 2022 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 51 25 2 18 22 37 18 27 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 80 6 10 22 19 17 6 32 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 118 17 18 22 45 46 57 53 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 279 71 42 49 83 127 71 115 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 254 93 36 22 49 73 113 60 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 104 35 43 35 52 48 62 64 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 51 36 29 35 48 41 33 68 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 34 11 23 12 19 29 30 14 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 18 12 16 14 21 36 25 13 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2022: 688,555 2,920,799 306,445 768,856 300,331 484,490 542,904 767,329 Proportion in farms .............................percent, 2022: 47.2 4.5 81.3 13.6 55.6 63.7 63.4 42.7 : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 97 66 6 33 70 137 90 65 acres: 506 309 20 167 359 627 379 339 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 368 99 29 39 71 115 96 82 acres: 9,329 2,274 792 1,046 1,661 2,451 2,291 1,853 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 76 4 13 15 19 12 18 14 acres: 4,424 250 827 826 1,144 673 1,012 792 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 100 10 14 13 20 14 15 27 acres: 8,104 807 1,180 1,000 1,571 1,077 1,230 2,295 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 59 21 15 10 13 24 6 16 acres: 7,087 2,415 1,857 1,190 1,584 2,634 732 1,929 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 41 17 12 21 24 13 18 40 acres: 6,565 2,735 1,980 3,287 3,698 2,020 2,858 6,430 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 25 3 7 7 12 14 17 17 acres: 4,804 596 1,373 1,311 2,474 2,834 3,256 3,362 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 24 8 9 8 7 10 9 14 acres: 5,845 1,900 2,131 1,852 1,607 2,427 2,148 3,273 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 71 27 15 27 39 26 40 43 acres: 25,418 10,252 5,686 10,067 14,534 8,548 15,417 16,065 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 58 27 34 22 38 25 30 53 acres: 38,234 19,417 23,340 15,939 24,576 16,129 21,393 40,263 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 22 14 20 24 22 37 32 33 acres: 31,657 18,852 27,107 32,064 30,514 48,682 43,767 47,853 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 48 10 45 10 23 27 44 42 acres: 183,017 71,809 182,722 36,098 83,198 220,460 249,929 203,260 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 170 55 10 24 104 176 117 34 acres: 961 227 (D) 105 386 878 545 149 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 337 114 43 66 126 145 94 87 acres: 9,100 2,477 1,072 1,563 2,736 3,637 2,046 2,092 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 66 20 7 12 19 19 4 17 acres: 3,848 1,194 435 646 1,198 1,121 224 970 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 88 13 15 13 29 38 29 21 acres: 6,978 1,105 1,177 1,012 2,380 3,012 2,389 1,764 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 88 21 7 15 13 14 7 19 acres: 10,262 2,475 785 1,796 1,485 1,633 814 2,228 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 49 10 13 21 8 15 14 38 acres: 7,687 1,640 2,136 3,302 1,248 2,328 2,263 6,009 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 38 2 4 7 14 20 7 13 acres: 7,456 (D) 810 1,369 2,676 3,842 1,370 2,557 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 13 2 1 9 8 22 3 9 acres: 3,092 (D) (D) 2,100 1,914 5,334 709 2,141 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 60 41 16 32 41 57 30 35 acres: 21,453 15,741 5,687 11,439 14,511 19,640 10,703 13,515 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 37 42 26 41 43 58 33 52 acres: 24,699 31,219 17,014 27,315 28,736 39,118 20,612 35,813 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 48 15 17 25 22 30 48 63 acres: 71,213 20,903 20,709 33,002 30,017 39,102 72,064 91,924 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 47 16 38 11 27 26 60 34 acres: 182,783 96,138 150,333 51,262 108,759 147,922 267,848 160,627 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2022: 808 186 185 159 294 313 311 370 2017: 802 230 167 215 341 429 329 349 acres, 2022: 228,085 37,311 167,431 60,741 142,882 278,599 207,955 171,013 2017: 254,711 46,419 151,108 84,910 159,995 242,569 233,792 151,329 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 524 166 128 135 273 296 240 261 2017: 590 220 118 198 324 408 265 269 acres, 2022: 177,685 32,381 136,707 50,547 125,298 238,687 164,374 84,770 2017: 204,762 40,269 111,209 74,119 141,626 228,396 196,219 64,659 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS AND LAND IN FARMS : : Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 2017: 565 640 295 48 277 1,211 188 535 Land in farms .......................................acres, 2022: 729,407 171,424 443,958 1,605 112,072 459,167 45,321 428,579 2017: 727,338 162,622 486,377 2,435 117,404 468,809 50,959 468,433 Average size of farm ............................acres, 2022: 1,582 299 1,609 36 418 393 319 866 2017: 1,287 254 1,649 51 424 387 271 876 : Estimated market value of land and buildings ........farms, 2022: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 2017: 565 640 295 48 277 1,211 188 535 $1,000, 2022: 1,477,073 889,911 1,744,561 13,710 617,718 2,814,008 176,743 985,450 2017: 1,184,330 569,930 1,200,100 16,352 464,236 2,081,187 132,166 634,434 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 3,204,064 1,550,368 6,320,874 311,600 2,304,916 2,407,193 1,244,669 1,990,807 2017: 2,096,160 890,516 4,068,136 340,665 1,675,941 1,718,569 703,011 1,185,859 Average per acre ..............................dollars, 2022: 2,025 5,191 3,930 8,542 5,512 6,129 3,900 2,299 2017: 1,628 3,505 2,467 6,715 3,954 4,439 2,594 1,354 2022 farms by value group: : $1 to $49,999 ..............................................: 33 38 14 5 18 47 19 38 $50,000 to $99,999 .........................................: 27 25 - 10 24 49 8 15 $100,000 to $199,999 .......................................: 26 47 22 7 9 82 19 35 $200,000 to $499,999 .......................................: 105 191 54 13 56 327 34 117 $500,000 to $999,999 .......................................: 102 147 38 8 49 280 28 126 : $1,000,000 to $1,999,999 ...................................: 47 61 43 1 50 114 12 65 $2,000,000 to $4,999,999 ...................................: 59 31 34 - 33 131 16 53 $5,000,000 to $9,999,999 ...................................: 35 9 29 - 12 72 2 25 $10,000,000 or more ........................................: 27 25 42 - 17 67 4 21 : Approximate land area ...............................acres, 2022: 4,907,652 260,414 898,445 1,687,905 287,418 1,229,896 2,345,678 929,825 Proportion in farms .............................percent, 2022: 14.9 65.8 49.4 0.1 39.0 37.3 1.9 46.1 : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 86 180 26 7 21 352 23 109 acres: 395 898 126 (D) 86 1,684 (D) 499 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 126 211 38 31 81 323 61 134 acres: 3,275 4,899 981 707 2,008 7,694 1,473 2,873 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 18 29 6 3 15 42 2 24 acres: 1,028 1,668 372 180 891 2,314 (D) 1,405 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 27 28 10 - 24 77 12 19 acres: 2,142 2,286 810 - 1,917 6,123 917 1,609 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 21 11 10 - 9 44 6 20 acres: 2,434 1,400 1,132 - 1,044 5,015 674 2,243 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 16 22 13 2 30 37 6 21 acres: 2,521 3,483 2,066 (D) 4,662 5,935 941 3,317 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 6 11 4 - 10 21 4 22 acres: 1,149 2,064 810 - 1,967 4,113 864 4,400 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 6 5 11 - 4 21 - 8 acres: 1,434 1,221 2,708 - 900 4,929 - 1,966 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 45 31 22 1 12 109 10 35 acres: 16,479 10,633 8,037 (D) 4,067 39,284 3,393 12,733 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 31 18 40 - 25 63 6 30 acres: 20,778 12,965 29,357 - 18,395 44,488 4,141 21,168 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 23 20 38 - 27 34 6 29 acres: 29,185 25,784 47,699 - 37,458 42,883 (D) 40,395 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 56 8 58 - 10 46 6 44 acres: 648,587 104,123 349,860 - 38,677 294,705 24,543 335,971 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 82 213 53 5 45 338 50 105 acres: 347 935 264 11 (D) 1,514 (D) 499 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 179 237 33 31 62 287 58 161 acres: 4,006 5,539 828 650 1,738 6,677 1,531 3,678 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 21 36 5 2 17 38 6 22 acres: 1,231 2,094 (D) (D) 984 2,134 359 1,316 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 28 30 4 1 14 76 11 20 acres: 2,331 2,513 (D) (D) 1,124 6,152 872 1,618 : 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 21 20 8 - 15 81 4 23 acres: 2,319 2,300 920 - 1,835 9,403 453 2,624 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 21 8 4 6 16 46 11 26 acres: 3,234 1,200 640 896 2,508 7,199 1,706 4,196 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 6 11 7 2 1 33 2 14 acres: 1,211 2,216 1,432 (D) (D) 6,524 (D) 2,752 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 16 12 6 - 3 42 4 16 acres: 3,810 2,781 1,412 - 686 9,949 954 3,812 : 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 61 23 15 1 42 125 15 41 acres: 22,563 8,265 5,029 (D) 14,739 46,644 5,320 15,378 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 44 30 44 - 28 74 15 27 acres: 27,771 24,731 31,117 - 21,659 52,245 9,208 20,023 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 27 10 50 - 22 27 5 28 acres: 36,380 13,353 75,461 - 29,476 34,099 6,041 38,004 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 59 10 66 - 12 44 7 52 acres: 622,135 96,695 368,712 - 42,218 286,269 23,850 374,533 : LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE : : Total cropland ......................................farms, 2022: 286 367 225 22 219 780 68 355 2017: 384 389 239 27 229 836 71 384 acres, 2022: 129,722 64,778 343,636 559 80,005 249,600 6,428 69,792 2017: 137,780 57,361 381,427 633 84,385 257,344 4,276 80,351 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 266 336 139 14 161 712 56 318 2017: 354 360 162 27 189 806 61 352 acres, 2022: 109,288 53,527 196,858 (D) 65,452 225,508 4,783 48,753 2017: 116,686 52,722 213,797 518 67,299 233,511 3,494 50,586 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements .....................................farms, 2022: 1,737 71 22 118 37 21 61 2017: 1,747 72 8 72 54 24 60 acres, 2022: 214,761 5,480 863 10,937 7,169 1,569 6,475 2017: 197,524 2,125 330 11,182 10,278 947 5,205 : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2022: 5,777 166 32 306 119 107 202 2017: 5,496 155 23 232 130 110 196 acres, 2022: 1,038,392 4,400 1,079 109,126 11,390 16,106 33,066 2017: 1,121,075 2,049 1,242 94,904 15,673 19,847 46,992 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2022: 3,822 115 30 215 49 72 146 2017: 3,537 82 12 181 69 70 138 acres, 2022: 660,805 1,966 973 83,839 4,182 7,450 26,440 2017: 754,602 919 751 78,103 9,710 8,460 33,151 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2022: 983 31 12 45 23 27 12 2017: 966 47 6 26 38 16 28 acres, 2022: 59,462 696 (D) 7,781 1,240 504 166 2017: 60,004 632 327 1,992 1,199 862 2,758 : Cropland in summer fallow .......................farms, 2022: 1,696 49 1 85 55 29 60 2017: 1,786 45 5 74 49 33 61 acres, 2022: 318,125 1,738 (D) 17,506 5,968 8,152 6,460 2017: 306,469 498 164 14,809 4,764 10,525 11,083 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2022: 3,406 37 48 75 23 116 39 2017: 3,767 29 47 72 35 162 49 acres, 2022: 479,705 1,276 7,776 9,917 2,706 34,050 2,663 2017: 524,137 401 9,128 9,958 4,639 41,242 4,603 Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2022: 1,561 4 29 41 13 41 20 2017: 1,779 8 28 31 22 79 25 acres, 2022: 250,428 40 5,750 7,406 2,308 1,987 1,092 2017: 288,767 157 5,949 7,443 3,603 2,443 3,090 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2022: 2,265 36 21 44 11 93 23 2017: 2,399 21 24 43 19 115 25 acres, 2022: 229,277 1,236 2,026 2,511 398 32,063 1,571 2017: 235,370 244 3,179 2,515 1,036 38,799 1,513 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .....................farms, 2022: 12,204 603 184 588 238 84 646 2017: 13,851 726 185 507 290 128 688 acres, 2022: 5,012,618 63,578 117,101 214,594 124,150 7,937 504,584 2017: 4,871,617 40,857 132,760 105,373 180,931 3,407 511,930 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, roads, wasteland, etc. .................farms, 2022: 13,192 743 153 499 150 120 497 2017: 14,448 865 144 422 171 182 594 acres, 2022: 432,124 4,840 4,712 14,671 2,630 11,812 27,215 2017: 401,482 8,252 4,254 18,221 3,110 13,198 18,693 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2022: 13,606 663 193 661 259 112 691 2017: 15,196 777 189 540 309 161 740 acres, 2022: 5,477,807 69,098 123,714 232,937 133,627 11,493 512,151 2017: 5,357,908 43,139 139,039 123,998 194,812 6,797 520,225 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2022: 1,681 5 - 116 37 46 43 2017: 1,773 2 3 141 50 51 75 acres, 2022: 423,658 906 - 73,673 8,102 5,907 11,727 2017: 568,878 (D) (D) 70,467 11,433 6,444 26,807 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2022: 2,599 30 4 47 22 33 150 2017: 2,676 35 2 52 18 36 180 acres, 2022: 2,933,445 15,623 1,795 54,798 18,376 50,525 218,967 2017: 2,576,251 19,562 (D) 42,224 16,525 51,494 223,598 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements .....................................farms, 2022: 13 5 85 65 18 19 5 2017: 18 4 65 75 26 17 18 acres, 2022: 9,002 (D) 2,187 5,045 596 2,642 (D) 2017: 6,719 (D) 1,581 7,683 783 2,731 1,018 : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2022: 50 8 169 180 89 39 53 2017: 44 4 246 233 95 76 74 acres, 2022: 3,770 (D) 8,842 53,766 4,391 2,216 (D) 2017: 7,128 (D) 7,897 80,232 7,925 6,202 13,875 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2022: 28 5 127 129 55 14 36 2017: 18 3 164 185 43 49 47 acres, 2022: 2,817 (D) 5,600 38,332 2,900 312 5,810 2017: 3,284 (D) 5,436 70,361 2,426 5,015 7,352 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2022: 6 1 28 12 34 5 4 2017: 10 1 58 12 31 13 27 acres, 2022: 198 (D) 949 1,231 1,150 230 (D) 2017: 1,804 (D) 1,183 280 1,697 168 2,678 : Cropland in summer fallow .......................farms, 2022: 22 2 45 48 16 23 20 2017: 23 2 54 56 48 25 21 acres, 2022: 755 (D) 2,293 14,203 341 1,674 7,165 2017: 2,040 (D) 1,278 9,591 3,802 1,019 3,845 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2022: 16 17 520 56 197 5 4 2017: 11 16 737 73 228 13 2 acres, 2022: 740 7,949 49,784 9,528 16,151 477 3,159 2017: 2,099 4,279 38,597 11,987 14,446 594 (D) Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2022: 5 7 235 24 79 4 1 2017: 6 8 298 33 89 4 - acres, 2022: 54 (D) 10,794 8,793 3,991 350 (D) 2017: 48 (D) 12,925 9,474 4,897 496 - Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2022: 12 12 380 35 151 3 3 2017: 6 13 543 44 182 9 2 acres, 2022: 686 (D) 38,990 735 12,160 127 (D) 2017: 2,051 (D) 25,672 2,513 9,549 98 (D) : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .....................farms, 2022: 109 76 368 478 136 55 43 2017: 94 64 539 584 166 87 68 acres, 2022: 185,187 51,931 9,830 137,781 6,309 31,047 83,286 2017: 150,397 46,973 11,640 133,332 7,550 43,042 81,322 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, roads, wasteland, etc. .................farms, 2022: 132 71 617 482 213 85 61 2017: 133 48 782 600 230 118 79 acres, 2022: 8,458 828 8,093 14,136 3,462 5,840 8,716 2017: 6,626 206 6,245 12,973 2,397 8,120 (D) Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2022: 119 78 503 529 172 73 46 2017: 105 65 665 639 215 96 72 acres, 2022: 194,243 62,195 22,811 151,619 10,896 34,039 84,633 2017: 157,164 50,187 26,146 150,489 13,230 46,269 82,340 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2022: 1 2 2 68 - 2 12 2017: 2 1 5 104 3 6 26 acres, 2022: (D) (D) (D) 29,319 - (D) 2,976 2017: (D) (D) 1,863 63,447 374 252 4,928 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2022: 20 - 13 99 17 39 25 2017: 13 - 5 101 17 74 24 acres, 2022: 29,155 - (D) 129,378 14,344 39,770 19,960 2017: 6,228 - (D) 80,681 15,249 52,987 15,408 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements .....................................farms, 2022: 175 15 33 4 16 16 10 2017: 182 25 47 1 20 32 11 acres, 2022: 9,260 11,224 (D) 2,389 678 1,948 3,774 2017: 4,420 4,099 17,363 (D) 422 8,239 (D) : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2022: 380 145 139 19 95 43 48 2017: 329 187 121 13 79 43 52 acres, 2022: 15,408 47,262 (D) 19,103 11,881 3,560 16,691 2017: 12,515 64,525 80,472 (D) 6,721 4,645 (D) : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2022: 204 105 84 18 65 13 31 2017: 200 136 96 13 38 32 26 acres, 2022: 5,890 25,631 37,997 (D) 4,820 460 9,434 2017: 7,959 46,848 57,394 (D) 1,959 2,845 4,255 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2022: 93 26 30 - 20 20 4 2017: 67 24 6 - 31 8 20 acres, 2022: 4,866 2,129 (D) - 2,196 1,728 (D) 2017: 1,928 1,711 137 - 1,896 88 4,071 : Cropland in summer fallow .......................farms, 2022: 101 49 51 1 20 16 17 2017: 89 68 39 1 26 15 12 acres, 2022: 4,652 19,502 21,617 (D) 4,865 1,372 (D) 2017: 2,628 15,966 22,941 (D) 2,866 1,712 (D) : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2022: 68 56 13 - 157 18 14 2017: 72 41 10 1 158 29 14 acres, 2022: 1,061 17,805 516 - 16,635 4,868 8,701 2017: 1,601 6,386 2,315 (D) 16,266 2,841 (D) Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2022: 23 22 10 - 80 17 14 2017: 24 25 4 1 78 24 6 acres, 2022: 575 15,074 (D) - 6,469 4,666 8,701 2017: 468 3,219 262 (D) 7,857 2,445 (D) Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2022: 47 42 9 - 101 7 - 2017: 50 17 6 - 94 10 10 acres, 2022: 486 2,731 (D) - 10,166 202 - 2017: 1,133 3,167 2,053 - 8,409 396 232 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .....................farms, 2022: 1,304 257 288 50 130 166 179 2017: 1,304 246 320 34 144 206 202 acres, 2022: 30,325 171,089 270,855 128,551 15,512 66,636 176,413 2017: 39,547 128,409 233,474 (D) 10,058 84,890 198,182 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, roads, wasteland, etc. .................farms, 2022: 1,414 216 304 26 188 132 146 2017: 1,365 214 312 27 226 154 206 acres, 2022: 17,825 24,938 19,817 2,740 10,206 6,817 9,831 2017: 14,390 14,593 22,550 (D) 5,443 10,418 (D) Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2022: 1,423 265 303 53 163 169 184 2017: 1,430 265 344 34 179 211 209 acres, 2022: 40,160 197,387 279,860 130,940 22,659 73,250 188,888 2017: 44,435 135,727 251,099 106,834 18,337 95,574 218,465 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2022: 3 76 48 4 37 - 5 2017: 7 123 69 12 25 6 3 acres, 2022: (D) 19,108 21,981 818 2,035 - 1,477 2017: 433 41,212 50,865 5,771 1,411 566 (D) : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2022: 171 62 121 14 17 17 31 2017: 148 76 113 23 17 21 31 acres, 2022: 85,257 123,651 194,535 42,240 8,572 12,747 59,109 2017: 58,713 124,250 162,014 28,347 12,627 7,649 37,543 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements .....................................farms, 2022: 93 36 69 36 43 52 48 41 2017: 56 37 67 32 51 85 30 46 acres, 2022: 9,962 2,248 2,733 (D) 9,059 1,541 9,252 1,915 2017: 2,846 1,336 1,887 (D) 15,946 10,973 (D) 649 : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2022: 254 199 128 72 247 125 57 300 2017: 252 144 102 56 239 112 58 245 acres, 2022: 29,647 35,425 4,820 (D) 38,740 9,462 8,714 17,077 2017: 39,648 26,237 2,887 (D) 54,921 14,745 (D) 16,037 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2022: 166 165 65 38 134 66 42 215 2017: 169 105 57 34 127 77 32 154 acres, 2022: 21,968 30,279 3,458 6,236 10,626 6,940 5,026 12,181 2017: 29,879 21,591 1,592 3,907 17,792 10,236 2,268 9,948 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2022: 57 11 29 24 45 26 4 66 2017: 37 17 23 7 45 21 6 50 acres, 2022: 1,862 457 389 1,096 4,586 426 385 872 2017: 1,707 1,742 746 (D) 4,593 1,685 (D) 1,135 : Cropland in summer fallow .......................farms, 2022: 60 26 53 15 112 41 13 59 2017: 103 27 29 20 123 21 22 57 acres, 2022: 5,817 4,689 973 (D) 23,528 2,096 3,303 4,024 2017: 8,062 2,904 549 1,203 32,536 2,824 386 4,954 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2022: 89 59 28 16 271 40 13 467 2017: 63 41 41 17 247 52 9 514 acres, 2022: 15,021 4,951 2,121 1,990 68,112 933 697 33,672 2017: 10,315 3,736 5,380 2,552 80,494 11,369 5,468 59,862 Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2022: 57 19 13 3 178 24 7 213 2017: 30 31 21 6 200 27 3 233 acres, 2022: 8,770 2,336 1,700 (D) 58,120 753 16 10,445 2017: 6,473 2,188 4,696 (D) 71,257 10,424 (D) 11,046 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2022: 56 41 15 13 117 20 6 312 2017: 37 16 20 11 66 32 6 351 acres, 2022: 6,251 2,615 421 (D) 9,992 180 681 23,227 2017: 3,842 1,548 684 (D) 9,237 945 (D) 48,816 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .....................farms, 2022: 394 253 426 297 431 352 216 392 2017: 433 257 519 318 447 402 245 537 acres, 2022: 133,945 58,815 165,079 53,859 294,812 67,172 22,270 10,817 2017: 74,648 96,654 141,856 45,623 265,089 85,955 18,811 13,032 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, roads, wasteland, etc. .................farms, 2022: 389 230 474 289 373 386 270 640 2017: 406 251 516 322 390 422 290 689 acres, 2022: 12,931 8,205 4,921 16,163 11,169 11,880 6,255 7,540 2017: 11,334 8,186 7,618 14,914 11,203 7,920 12,809 4,569 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2022: 434 271 467 315 485 388 253 500 2017: 463 272 553 338 498 467 264 629 acres, 2022: 152,677 63,399 169,512 61,380 361,991 69,466 31,538 23,177 2017: 83,967 100,178 148,439 47,530 352,292 107,352 21,365 24,727 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2022: 117 103 4 1 79 18 6 71 2017: 135 87 4 1 58 24 9 42 acres, 2022: 20,043 19,665 (D) (D) 5,595 5,633 1,368 6,159 2017: 22,586 17,543 133 (D) 5,303 2,338 739 5,074 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2022: 31 116 24 79 154 100 93 10 2017: 50 102 31 45 145 103 91 27 acres, 2022: 35,000 117,413 4,406 54,791 164,211 99,131 76,605 18,212 2017: 21,329 82,000 2,922 35,587 108,019 102,065 71,332 29,677 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements .....................................farms, 2022: 64 29 23 21 24 19 27 54 2017: 55 24 13 43 42 29 40 40 acres, 2022: 2,502 3,156 4,612 (D) 3,606 (D) 5,980 8,916 2017: 4,216 4,388 4,022 (D) 1,297 (D) 2,846 6,188 : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2022: 492 38 124 50 97 73 165 222 2017: 405 39 112 60 79 71 137 185 acres, 2022: 47,898 1,774 26,112 (D) 13,978 (D) 37,601 77,327 2017: 45,733 1,762 35,877 (D) 17,072 (D) 34,727 80,482 : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2022: 399 12 86 31 70 48 109 149 2017: 277 19 78 38 53 46 86 127 acres, 2022: 31,622 332 10,122 3,484 10,423 24,598 21,231 36,088 2017: 25,136 899 9,610 4,537 14,221 11,592 12,971 54,346 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2022: 33 11 25 6 8 18 31 41 2017: 43 11 17 5 15 13 17 35 acres, 2022: 1,490 66 5,490 (D) 205 (D) 1,567 2,705 2017: 3,233 635 3,500 953 781 (D) 3,068 4,001 : Cropland in summer fallow .......................farms, 2022: 94 21 51 25 22 20 55 84 2017: 111 9 48 19 24 15 64 72 acres, 2022: 14,786 1,376 10,500 3,970 3,350 11,127 14,803 38,534 2017: 17,364 228 22,767 (D) 2,070 1,263 18,688 22,135 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2022: 450 28 76 7 35 3 115 16 2017: 475 47 60 5 34 7 100 28 acres, 2022: 39,936 2,284 38,451 141 3,294 12 30,481 1,849 2017: 62,861 5,217 12,155 (D) 2,392 172 37,812 6,689 Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2022: 133 18 44 5 11 2 67 8 2017: 152 25 38 3 24 2 67 14 acres, 2022: 18,614 2,125 13,681 (D) 812 (D) 23,239 908 2017: 40,565 4,557 9,878 (D) 939 (D) 29,520 4,630 Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2022: 352 12 41 2 27 1 67 15 2017: 363 23 30 2 11 5 49 16 acres, 2022: 21,322 159 24,770 (D) 2,482 (D) 7,242 941 2017: 22,296 660 2,277 (D) 1,453 (D) 8,292 2,059 : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .....................farms, 2022: 314 222 82 147 124 229 197 241 2017: 436 265 82 167 213 312 243 258 acres, 2022: 43,686 86,400 38,416 37,213 17,302 24,335 92,351 147,136 2017: 24,183 118,323 28,087 43,051 29,718 20,717 103,682 154,839 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, roads, wasteland, etc. .................farms, 2022: 633 180 115 121 171 226 240 251 2017: 627 218 94 168 208 307 253 226 acres, 2022: 13,283 5,621 4,717 6,752 3,442 5,616 13,625 7,716 2017: 7,777 3,997 9,085 (D) 3,941 4,109 6,301 6,932 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2022: 395 239 112 155 145 240 220 266 2017: 508 271 94 195 239 326 268 277 acres, 2022: 64,802 91,681 56,709 39,557 21,720 26,923 121,570 156,960 2017: 68,964 127,268 41,987 47,738 31,954 21,920 136,048 165,657 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2022: 264 - 74 7 25 35 77 116 2017: 205 2 60 6 25 29 57 125 acres, 2022: 19,763 - 5,079 168 7,131 5,099 18,157 33,949 2017: 14,743 (D) 5,341 907 11,147 5,456 7,286 49,417 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2022: 153 10 102 37 100 105 104 57 2017: 134 4 81 35 99 152 102 62 acres, 2022: 166,589 7,385 152,561 22,180 85,801 169,052 157,878 55,078 2017: 194,905 4,860 130,735 30,459 95,477 120,966 195,749 31,710 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 8. Farms, Land in Farms, Value of Land and Buildings, and Land Use: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS ACCORDING TO USE - Con. : : Total cropland - Con. : : Other pasture and grazing land that could have : been used for crops without additional : improvements .....................................farms, 2022: 34 34 15 2 26 88 10 40 2017: 61 39 15 4 16 49 12 30 acres, 2022: (D) 5,929 (D) (D) 1,763 7,536 1,247 9,326 2017: (D) (D) (D) 25 1,571 3,195 532 (D) : Other cropland ....................................farms, 2022: 58 113 155 8 87 199 16 109 2017: 95 81 159 5 98 196 18 106 acres, 2022: (D) 5,322 (D) (D) 12,790 16,556 398 11,713 2017: (D) (D) (D) 90 15,515 20,638 250 (D) : Cropland idle or used for cover crops or : soil improvement, but not harvested and : not pastured or grazed .........................farms, 2022: 33 67 137 8 60 105 14 62 2017: 47 30 129 1 74 109 8 58 acres, 2022: 6,123 3,375 105,557 (D) 9,348 10,851 284 6,436 2017: 10,471 530 119,048 (D) 10,785 16,858 166 14,290 Cropland on which all crops failed ..............farms, 2022: 13 25 9 - 8 43 - 17 2017: 28 20 3 3 14 27 7 33 acres, 2022: (D) 1,115 (D) - 358 1,472 - 1,291 2017: (D) (D) (D) (D) 785 972 69 (D) : Cropland in summer fallow .......................farms, 2022: 26 39 42 - 26 61 3 38 2017: 28 42 54 2 28 85 3 34 acres, 2022: 5,070 832 32,824 - 3,084 4,233 114 3,986 2017: 2,126 870 43,269 (D) 3,945 2,808 15 2,426 : Total woodland ......................................farms, 2022: 19 26 15 24 33 25 50 22 2017: 33 35 16 27 33 20 42 22 acres, 2022: 7,513 380 1,085 764 13,564 146 10,777 5,769 2017: 13,253 1,336 3,771 841 4,657 352 7,013 8,088 Woodland pastured .................................farms, 2022: 8 7 1 10 14 4 34 12 2017: 12 14 1 12 18 12 28 13 acres, 2022: (D) 301 (D) (D) 872 37 10,351 5,634 2017: (D) (D) (D) (D) 1,994 192 4,422 (D) Woodland not pastured .............................farms, 2022: 11 19 14 16 25 21 22 10 2017: 22 21 15 20 15 9 16 10 acres, 2022: (D) 79 (D) (D) 12,692 109 426 135 2017: (D) (D) (D) (D) 2,663 160 2,591 (D) : Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than : cropland and woodland pastured .....................farms, 2022: 270 344 124 17 110 645 100 295 2017: 300 388 117 27 156 719 115 313 acres, 2022: 573,547 102,045 76,211 181 16,128 189,344 27,211 337,647 2017: 549,531 98,991 86,576 (D) 20,163 196,727 38,336 365,593 : Land in farmsteads, homes, buildings, livestock : facilities, roads, wasteland, etc. .................farms, 2022: 258 353 144 28 122 687 72 291 2017: 353 382 158 39 122 714 102 319 acres, 2022: 18,625 4,221 23,026 101 2,375 20,077 905 15,371 2017: 26,774 4,934 14,603 (D) 8,199 14,386 1,334 14,401 Pastureland, all types ..............................farms, 2022: 298 358 128 25 133 698 106 316 2017: 346 414 123 31 170 744 130 331 acres, 2022: 588,649 108,275 83,796 329 18,763 196,917 38,809 352,607 2017: 562,508 102,051 92,711 1,128 23,728 200,114 43,290 380,686 : CONSERVATION AND CROP INSURANCE : : Land enrolled in Conservation Reserve, Wetlands : Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, or Conservation : Reserve Enhancement Programs .......................farms, 2022: - - 118 - 37 7 - 15 2017: 2 3 118 - 36 14 - 17 acres, 2022: - - 84,530 - 3,621 (D) - 2,660 2017: (D) 159 112,575 - 8,208 4,746 - 6,110 : Land enrolled in crop insurance programs ............farms, 2022: 43 32 80 - 36 165 2 34 2017: 55 24 77 - 52 183 - 36 acres, 2022: 42,402 10,005 146,437 - 46,016 134,063 (D) 43,223 2017: 20,269 5,225 192,725 - 39,959 96,691 - 7,297 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 13,037 662 119 471 256 129 561 2017: 15,028 819 123 382 261 162 661 acres harvested, 2022: 4,370,363 32,982 14,039 60,578 61,633 58,997 323,793 2017: 4,576,077 58,686 15,340 75,400 82,328 61,303 345,521 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 2,224 276 11 158 21 6 78 acres harvested: 7,367 945 (D) 420 92 19 286 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 3,804 293 30 119 53 40 148 acres harvested: 52,525 3,108 406 1,339 1,005 613 2,057 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 494 14 10 13 13 3 27 acres harvested: 16,297 (D) 171 389 342 25 836 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 696 13 10 16 8 19 27 acres harvested: 32,736 542 543 774 533 313 1,537 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 571 9 3 15 24 9 19 acres harvested: 38,167 690 142 873 1,546 287 1,524 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 518 2 8 16 7 4 26 acres harvested: 51,732 (D) 304 1,549 502 390 3,007 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 330 8 5 17 15 3 11 acres harvested: 36,814 570 304 1,025 1,731 120 1,859 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 307 10 1 11 10 5 9 acres harvested: 43,884 1,131 (D) 613 773 960 1,389 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1,103 10 5 31 31 5 60 acres harvested: 240,975 1,983 316 3,551 5,121 661 16,187 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 1,044 10 8 31 31 15 45 acres harvested: 450,037 4,580 960 4,745 9,418 6,565 20,252 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 862 11 15 19 18 8 38 acres harvested: 685,087 11,699 3,567 5,815 10,496 6,984 41,357 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,084 6 13 25 25 12 73 acres harvested: 2,714,742 7,047 7,277 39,485 30,074 42,060 233,502 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 2,593 364 24 68 2 11 123 acres harvested: 9,513 1,350 124 204 (D) 54 471 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 4,185 309 30 75 43 46 165 acres harvested: 58,637 3,324 475 874 807 566 2,399 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 592 27 5 14 8 5 27 acres harvested: 19,613 946 91 506 (D) 175 828 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 870 32 6 13 25 19 33 acres harvested: 43,786 2,009 219 693 1,316 440 2,019 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 683 13 6 27 24 14 16 acres harvested: 45,673 1,267 284 1,300 1,384 365 1,511 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 584 2 9 19 6 3 15 acres harvested: 53,108 (D) 503 1,365 395 360 1,618 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 376 6 3 11 9 4 14 acres harvested: 46,466 1,098 210 788 1,157 212 2,049 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 386 9 1 11 11 4 15 acres harvested: 56,175 (D) (D) 619 1,313 133 1,969 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1,372 17 3 53 37 10 49 acres harvested: 306,169 3,749 349 7,987 6,254 1,001 10,886 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 1,346 16 14 39 42 22 74 acres harvested: 549,139 7,783 1,838 5,972 12,903 9,231 30,121 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 970 12 9 25 15 10 55 acres harvested: 788,386 11,511 (D) 11,284 8,477 7,681 54,953 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,071 12 13 27 39 14 75 acres harvested: 2,599,412 24,812 9,630 43,808 48,217 41,085 236,697 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2022 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 4,033 456 33 236 29 37 138 acres: 17,174 2,088 (D) 843 142 184 644 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 1,591 91 13 43 39 13 58 acres: 20,912 1,107 184 541 521 176 721 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 832 29 12 33 21 15 42 acres: 19,193 637 276 762 488 352 982 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 998 28 13 26 20 15 41 acres: 37,051 1,044 487 974 719 575 1,526 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 1,154 15 15 43 36 7 40 acres: 79,880 1,054 954 3,072 2,466 467 2,724 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 1,197 13 14 46 42 7 41 acres: 169,284 1,666 2,012 6,259 6,129 942 6,153 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1,342 14 14 18 33 9 85 acres: 418,020 4,927 4,905 4,647 10,544 2,637 25,685 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 826 5 3 16 23 11 34 acres: 573,634 3,110 1,600 10,846 15,096 7,226 23,884 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,064 11 2 10 13 15 82 acres: 3,035,215 17,349 (D) 32,634 25,528 46,438 261,474 : 2017 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 4,447 557 32 114 19 36 179 acres: 19,330 2,467 (D) 467 112 145 792 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 1,831 79 18 33 23 29 81 acres: 24,115 969 220 455 340 395 1,065 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 945 31 13 32 24 19 38 acres: 21,608 696 306 748 519 400 887 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 1,226 43 13 25 16 16 40 acres: 45,068 1,559 504 866 558 608 1,498 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 1,474 44 18 72 54 13 50 acres: 101,579 3,042 1,201 5,271 3,976 926 3,547 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 1,357 17 11 41 32 9 65 acres: 188,381 2,330 1,553 5,342 4,433 1,375 9,006 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 1,700 21 8 32 48 8 59 acres: 531,876 7,543 2,406 9,508 14,214 2,196 18,753 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 946 13 7 14 22 13 58 acres: 648,584 8,904 4,480 9,939 12,989 8,599 38,184 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 1,102 14 3 19 23 19 91 acres: 2,995,536 31,176 (D) 42,804 45,187 46,659 271,789 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 144 45 413 531 212 106 82 2017: 134 43 741 662 220 154 110 acres harvested, 2022: 52,396 (D) 18,710 186,338 42,455 57,766 77,542 2017: 38,259 907 23,371 172,674 35,783 69,677 83,657 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 16 15 44 129 23 6 3 acres harvested: (D) 49 (D) 413 65 (D) 3 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 47 11 170 182 68 9 9 acres harvested: 656 91 1,718 2,092 804 163 103 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 2 - 21 12 13 1 3 acres harvested: (D) - 284 (D) 361 (D) 152 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 7 - 42 18 16 8 7 acres harvested: 208 - 1,379 1,129 655 489 461 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 7 6 40 22 19 1 2 acres harvested: 644 30 1,705 2,300 1,211 (D) (D) 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 6 1 16 23 15 7 2 acres harvested: 720 (D) 832 2,581 984 872 (D) 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: - 2 9 1 5 6 1 acres harvested: - (D) 462 (D) 605 1,043 (D) 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 1 - 17 13 4 9 - acres harvested: (D) - 1,368 2,233 416 1,535 - 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 12 2 25 20 12 18 6 acres harvested: 2,501 (D) 3,243 5,151 1,361 4,946 982 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 6 2 14 35 14 5 18 acres harvested: 2,598 (D) 3,013 16,984 7,059 1,042 9,508 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 18 - 13 32 18 24 13 acres harvested: 9,256 - 3,190 22,726 18,902 21,707 12,650 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 22 6 2 44 5 12 18 acres harvested: 35,583 (D) (D) 130,296 10,032 25,821 53,314 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 20 22 156 158 13 9 5 acres harvested: (D) 96 (D) 643 34 33 (D) 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 40 8 331 249 65 15 14 acres harvested: 717 47 3,118 2,896 732 222 272 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 3 1 32 25 17 11 1 acres harvested: 68 (D) 694 1,064 390 561 (D) 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 8 - 58 22 19 8 6 acres harvested: 539 - 1,682 1,389 645 472 404 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 7 1 33 14 33 11 7 acres harvested: 563 (D) 1,511 1,380 1,796 770 455 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 3 1 24 21 15 5 4 acres harvested: 355 (D) 1,136 1,752 1,180 595 600 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 1 2 17 13 6 3 3 acres harvested: (D) (D) 1,515 2,015 909 462 600 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: - 1 21 5 7 16 1 acres harvested: - (D) 1,016 978 593 3,186 (D) 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 4 - 38 43 7 14 14 acres harvested: 563 - 5,465 12,513 1,133 3,007 2,022 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 15 3 24 42 22 14 15 acres harvested: 6,263 120 3,373 17,936 8,361 6,511 8,396 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 14 - 6 40 10 34 20 acres harvested: 4,312 - 2,747 22,320 8,396 36,444 20,873 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 19 4 1 30 6 14 20 acres harvested: 24,629 (D) (D) 107,788 11,614 17,414 49,726 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2022 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 39 29 153 222 59 11 8 acres: 205 95 (D) 972 232 47 32 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 20 5 79 70 36 2 4 acres: 293 71 969 908 445 (D) (D) 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 9 4 42 23 24 1 1 acres: 200 83 938 503 552 (D) (D) 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 8 2 47 22 17 5 2 acres: 283 (D) 1,661 852 731 172 (D) 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 5 3 51 43 25 12 13 acres: 421 (D) 3,428 3,021 1,995 789 872 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 16 2 28 42 17 22 6 acres: 1,999 (D) 4,095 5,814 2,239 3,289 942 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 20 - 7 33 7 24 11 acres: 6,686 - 1,983 10,405 2,345 6,873 4,030 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 14 - 4 30 8 9 19 acres: 10,624 - 2,566 18,820 6,421 6,465 15,782 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 13 - 2 46 19 20 18 acres: 31,685 - (D) 145,043 27,495 40,082 55,730 : 2017 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 26 30 380 280 56 10 12 acres: 95 136 1,343 1,334 205 34 60 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 23 1 134 98 44 9 3 acres: 346 (D) 1,797 1,229 588 104 41 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 9 3 61 45 14 10 8 acres: 209 (D) 1,340 1,039 346 224 164 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 11 3 52 30 17 8 5 acres: 394 94 1,870 1,165 649 304 194 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 11 3 61 37 25 21 11 acres: 814 (D) 4,053 2,477 1,629 1,463 761 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 12 3 29 48 31 22 10 acres: 1,651 (D) 3,803 6,728 3,966 3,232 1,412 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 25 - 18 67 12 25 14 acres: 8,618 - 4,787 21,900 3,582 6,667 4,136 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 9 - 6 25 10 21 23 acres: 5,740 - 4,378 15,839 6,290 15,080 15,813 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 8 - - 32 11 28 24 acres: 20,392 - - 120,963 18,528 42,569 61,076 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 1,166 212 348 34 146 138 128 2017: 1,257 248 375 31 179 175 170 acres harvested, 2022: 203,509 144,142 294,586 53,344 11,318 30,101 80,780 2017: 202,479 148,487 287,172 34,733 17,646 36,804 122,869 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 313 12 38 - 4 13 21 acres harvested: 1,101 36 123 - (D) 63 110 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 439 38 64 - 60 27 27 acres harvested: 6,118 347 1,003 - 732 416 246 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 35 4 12 - 10 9 5 acres harvested: 1,185 120 568 - 233 295 125 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 55 3 12 1 10 6 4 acres harvested: 3,422 144 673 (D) 326 217 98 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 40 7 11 - 12 8 - acres harvested: 3,541 440 1,039 - 445 587 - 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 38 7 14 2 5 3 6 acres harvested: 4,173 490 1,737 (D) 225 385 960 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 25 3 5 - 6 8 3 acres harvested: 3,199 302 863 - 552 840 353 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 22 10 7 2 4 - 5 acres harvested: 4,013 1,617 1,119 (D) 365 - 778 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 66 32 41 5 16 19 10 acres harvested: 18,980 6,144 10,408 1,080 1,405 2,992 1,306 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 70 23 22 3 8 24 10 acres harvested: 41,824 8,398 11,014 970 (D) 10,612 3,996 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 41 26 43 5 6 12 9 acres harvested: 50,626 15,991 33,614 (D) 3,382 6,652 5,245 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 22 47 79 16 5 9 28 acres harvested: 65,327 110,113 232,425 47,320 2,914 7,042 67,563 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 364 25 59 - 23 8 27 acres harvested: 1,379 (D) 199 - (D) 37 121 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 440 23 68 - 74 28 46 acres harvested: 7,044 300 964 - 1,120 358 534 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 40 2 8 - 11 15 1 acres harvested: 1,278 (D) 283 - 337 372 (D) 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 65 5 10 - 11 7 13 acres harvested: 3,824 230 519 - 394 274 469 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 47 3 12 - 11 13 5 acres harvested: 3,846 168 1,113 - 360 702 273 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 44 12 5 2 9 11 9 acres harvested: 3,981 976 613 (D) 340 890 686 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 17 5 10 - 12 4 2 acres harvested: 2,549 988 1,976 - 685 595 (D) 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 24 9 15 - 2 8 2 acres harvested: 4,721 1,068 2,889 - (D) 935 (D) 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 75 49 44 5 10 22 16 acres harvested: 21,894 8,399 12,904 1,190 1,422 3,613 2,632 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 83 39 20 10 7 32 9 acres harvested: 49,181 11,158 8,583 5,004 1,076 10,379 4,796 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 39 38 52 4 6 13 16 acres harvested: 48,868 24,794 43,290 (D) 3,650 7,022 15,038 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 19 38 72 10 3 14 24 acres harvested: 53,914 100,193 213,839 25,793 7,984 11,627 97,822 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2022 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 480 39 57 - 34 26 42 acres: 2,003 139 217 - (D) 145 236 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 190 10 29 - 31 15 14 acres: 2,586 144 389 - 390 194 (D) 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 63 9 14 - 16 6 2 acres: 1,478 224 320 - 364 135 (D) 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 73 6 25 1 22 7 5 acres: 2,605 245 883 (D) 776 250 214 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 84 20 25 4 18 11 6 acres: 6,059 1,345 1,777 300 1,232 795 442 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 77 22 42 5 12 26 11 acres: 10,466 3,185 6,365 (D) 1,454 3,446 1,639 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 89 51 50 9 4 24 19 acres: 29,003 15,500 15,587 2,396 840 7,589 5,788 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 59 12 30 3 7 18 11 acres: 42,390 8,435 20,575 2,140 4,136 11,262 7,423 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 51 43 76 12 2 5 18 acres: 106,919 114,925 248,473 47,728 (D) 6,285 64,807 : 2017 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 520 37 87 - 51 26 47 acres: 2,289 220 372 - 190 118 244 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 169 9 29 - 32 25 33 acres: 2,292 119 388 - 408 362 458 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 75 9 13 - 29 11 5 acres: 1,732 211 303 - 615 269 109 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 104 11 14 - 26 9 5 acres: 3,695 410 507 - 901 359 190 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 109 33 22 3 17 20 14 acres: 7,546 2,415 1,566 230 1,051 1,382 886 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 66 40 39 5 11 25 16 acres: 9,288 5,922 5,895 681 1,406 3,633 2,331 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 101 52 66 7 6 41 15 acres: 32,609 16,937 20,786 1,995 1,741 11,906 4,645 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 63 18 41 9 4 11 13 acres: 44,572 13,673 28,567 5,556 3,147 8,035 9,985 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 50 39 64 7 3 7 22 acres: 98,456 108,580 228,788 26,271 8,187 10,740 104,021 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 466 291 432 290 435 454 276 465 2017: 501 309 470 327 424 505 323 559 acres harvested, 2022: 74,567 165,603 19,873 125,314 123,368 171,192 132,964 36,706 2017: 89,591 143,429 23,549 119,358 109,775 202,560 129,291 45,556 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 88 34 158 28 8 85 26 102 acres harvested: 287 131 522 106 35 302 62 (D) 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 126 58 149 79 114 149 60 216 acres harvested: 1,957 818 1,991 1,325 1,555 2,094 994 2,449 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 20 15 14 14 14 29 5 19 acres harvested: 812 617 618 509 459 885 180 546 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 27 19 27 15 35 16 16 29 acres harvested: 1,097 873 1,102 743 1,043 838 1,030 783 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 18 16 17 19 20 24 13 17 acres harvested: 1,257 1,422 633 1,658 822 1,934 1,155 545 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 15 37 8 7 15 18 9 12 acres harvested: 1,492 3,951 533 907 833 1,980 1,209 834 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 20 7 3 9 15 7 10 5 acres harvested: 1,722 707 133 920 915 1,149 1,544 380 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 20 5 3 7 18 3 7 2 acres harvested: 2,991 589 447 1,262 1,771 520 1,207 (D) 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 41 29 15 34 39 32 42 26 acres harvested: 6,997 8,354 2,978 7,990 5,152 8,276 12,048 2,772 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 44 23 19 39 54 33 43 23 acres harvested: 15,009 12,637 4,714 19,338 17,483 20,606 20,409 4,070 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 25 14 9 13 55 24 24 9 acres harvested: 11,001 12,215 3,423 18,642 35,002 26,455 25,145 5,997 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 22 34 10 26 48 34 21 5 acres harvested: 29,945 123,289 2,779 71,914 58,298 106,153 67,981 17,870 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 73 41 173 30 15 75 36 132 acres harvested: 303 149 642 114 81 256 84 533 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 79 62 150 102 83 147 64 228 acres harvested: 1,343 1,115 1,740 1,758 1,432 2,390 983 2,534 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 25 7 10 12 30 34 16 31 acres harvested: 744 295 209 471 1,271 1,405 600 848 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 27 30 32 11 26 33 26 43 acres harvested: 1,439 1,774 1,951 521 1,120 1,934 1,669 1,466 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 27 6 22 11 18 25 14 15 acres harvested: 1,877 345 1,498 683 1,088 1,924 1,246 804 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 53 20 11 17 25 24 17 21 acres harvested: 4,687 1,717 1,094 2,159 1,450 2,953 2,424 1,292 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 9 11 9 27 15 9 7 14 acres harvested: 1,022 2,039 1,068 3,129 1,218 1,520 1,025 778 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 23 11 9 14 10 3 8 3 acres harvested: 3,150 2,344 1,246 2,009 598 520 1,831 337 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 74 41 20 38 56 34 56 27 acres harvested: 12,928 10,652 3,895 10,649 6,680 8,999 15,712 3,656 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 58 43 14 26 47 48 42 29 acres harvested: 19,301 21,081 3,254 13,679 12,167 26,532 22,739 3,316 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 42 13 8 15 44 35 20 12 acres harvested: 24,741 14,423 2,754 13,324 27,008 34,044 23,706 10,303 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 11 24 12 24 55 38 17 4 acres harvested: 18,056 87,495 4,198 70,862 55,662 120,083 57,272 19,689 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2022 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 135 47 233 48 78 147 45 223 acres: 554 212 997 180 340 673 180 906 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 59 43 58 40 56 67 21 83 acres: 857 531 748 549 742 878 241 1,037 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 37 18 32 19 39 28 13 34 acres: 862 413 (D) 454 901 668 296 750 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 38 21 30 25 40 33 20 52 acres: 1,356 759 1,115 945 1,468 1,334 786 1,863 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 56 31 40 36 50 32 15 33 acres: 3,977 1,879 2,696 2,664 3,278 2,166 1,081 2,270 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 53 42 15 33 42 33 40 14 acres: 7,120 6,028 2,003 4,862 5,968 4,504 5,780 1,861 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 48 29 15 29 58 33 61 12 acres: 13,693 10,739 4,698 9,230 16,828 10,273 19,416 3,202 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 27 23 8 30 40 34 27 8 acres: 19,723 16,096 4,889 20,752 28,832 23,357 18,795 5,727 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 13 37 1 30 32 47 34 6 acres: 26,425 128,946 (D) 85,678 65,011 127,339 86,389 19,090 : 2017 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 103 59 244 73 44 132 60 264 acres: 479 279 989 352 230 602 234 1,192 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 41 35 70 30 49 44 20 99 acres: 555 460 887 393 648 577 253 1,194 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 29 23 13 22 36 27 17 34 acres: 645 521 296 508 809 641 386 789 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 49 23 37 37 51 63 28 66 acres: 1,826 854 1,288 1,349 1,933 2,246 1,056 2,385 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 70 26 50 21 71 49 37 43 acres: 4,575 1,924 3,672 1,364 4,644 3,307 2,620 2,671 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 94 31 26 48 58 40 33 20 acres: 12,611 4,555 3,623 6,828 7,744 5,578 5,068 2,490 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 69 54 21 45 53 48 71 21 acres: 20,186 17,336 5,562 14,783 16,665 13,968 22,614 5,813 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 30 28 5 23 32 58 25 3 acres: 21,886 19,823 3,140 15,352 21,538 39,768 19,446 2,662 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 16 30 4 28 30 44 32 9 acres: 26,828 97,677 4,092 78,429 55,564 135,873 77,614 26,360 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 524 166 128 135 273 296 240 261 2017: 590 220 118 198 324 408 265 269 acres harvested, 2022: 177,685 32,381 136,707 50,547 125,298 238,687 164,374 84,770 2017: 204,762 40,269 111,209 74,119 141,626 228,396 196,219 64,659 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 60 17 2 8 47 39 41 22 acres harvested: 142 42 (D) 17 133 141 (D) 87 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 186 43 9 7 46 74 47 51 acres harvested: 2,637 488 224 122 905 1,309 717 709 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 33 3 4 6 11 8 6 6 acres harvested: 828 33 (D) 162 578 345 226 216 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 27 9 6 7 15 10 6 16 acres harvested: 877 296 193 237 979 699 208 986 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 27 7 7 7 11 19 2 11 acres harvested: 1,148 330 673 659 691 1,430 (D) 447 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 12 6 1 17 22 12 16 19 acres harvested: 438 360 (D) 1,660 3,164 1,377 1,309 1,633 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 15 3 5 6 6 14 7 9 acres harvested: 945 335 543 1,131 992 2,310 319 1,554 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 13 7 3 7 7 10 4 6 acres harvested: 1,254 1,046 296 656 630 2,082 738 750 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 51 25 6 22 35 23 29 22 acres harvested: 8,164 4,174 1,690 6,151 11,034 6,037 7,723 3,088 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 31 22 24 19 28 25 21 29 acres harvested: 17,180 6,855 7,159 7,606 17,004 14,791 9,735 9,980 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 22 14 20 19 22 35 22 31 acres harvested: 28,633 4,677 19,085 11,440 27,354 36,683 17,720 14,894 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 47 10 41 10 23 27 39 39 acres harvested: 115,439 13,745 106,579 20,706 61,834 171,483 125,468 50,426 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 86 12 1 7 36 52 50 9 acres harvested: 351 26 (D) 29 108 230 164 19 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 208 69 15 32 91 88 44 57 acres harvested: 2,883 684 208 430 1,384 1,858 430 913 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 25 9 5 10 13 9 1 11 acres harvested: 721 252 (D) 217 452 430 (D) 432 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 34 9 - 9 24 32 13 19 acres harvested: 1,105 357 - 439 1,507 1,944 614 1,067 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 41 16 5 10 13 13 4 13 acres harvested: 1,866 976 264 822 972 1,158 354 781 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 16 4 3 17 5 14 7 17 acres harvested: 1,138 438 315 1,387 491 1,758 365 1,698 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 14 2 4 7 14 15 5 8 acres harvested: 769 (D) 652 1,096 2,464 1,707 176 860 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 9 2 1 7 6 22 2 5 acres harvested: 895 (D) (D) 675 1,334 4,627 (D) 669 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 42 38 8 30 40 51 15 17 acres harvested: 7,029 6,667 1,628 6,260 11,484 15,394 2,705 2,322 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 23 34 21 39 37 56 28 39 acres harvested: 10,351 8,083 6,662 14,938 21,279 36,233 6,643 7,291 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 46 12 17 20 20 30 39 49 acres harvested: 55,438 4,822 13,763 13,545 23,842 32,665 42,991 18,346 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 46 13 38 10 25 26 57 25 acres harvested: 122,216 17,539 87,470 34,281 76,309 130,392 141,702 30,261 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2022 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 187 43 6 10 66 60 73 42 acres: 801 179 26 33 231 273 246 209 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 71 20 3 5 12 20 16 34 acres: 1,011 279 43 66 177 259 201 460 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 31 7 8 13 11 23 8 13 acres: 705 165 182 309 270 518 189 315 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 50 9 9 8 21 19 19 20 acres: 1,831 306 345 319 787 707 760 760 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 35 14 6 11 23 30 11 35 acres: 2,273 1,034 448 738 1,630 2,058 701 2,780 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 37 22 18 30 39 28 18 43 acres: 5,110 2,933 2,255 4,349 5,767 3,841 2,667 6,316 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 26 33 15 34 34 36 37 32 acres: 8,432 9,244 4,720 10,946 12,094 9,670 12,722 9,937 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 26 11 16 10 29 34 20 23 acres: 19,939 6,186 10,329 6,390 19,185 24,214 13,609 17,200 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 61 7 47 14 38 46 38 19 acres: 137,583 12,055 118,359 27,397 85,157 197,147 133,279 46,793 : 2017 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 181 50 13 25 58 71 83 29 acres: 857 199 78 139 216 326 328 113 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 111 31 3 10 47 26 23 35 acres: 1,473 413 (D) 132 579 347 300 477 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 55 16 1 14 16 22 4 15 acres: 1,244 365 (D) 297 382 531 90 363 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 51 11 9 10 25 39 17 23 acres: 1,865 389 323 360 891 1,512 646 915 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 37 25 8 29 34 34 17 66 acres: 2,603 1,684 558 1,903 2,366 2,297 1,175 4,445 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 25 32 8 37 26 41 10 33 acres: 3,268 4,240 1,069 4,943 3,817 5,108 1,360 4,817 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 33 36 19 40 46 71 18 44 acres: 9,350 11,950 5,641 12,742 14,803 21,224 5,195 16,156 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 22 12 18 20 34 56 27 9 acres: 16,660 7,460 11,417 13,240 22,800 38,682 16,835 6,458 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 75 7 39 13 38 48 66 15 acres: 167,442 13,569 92,056 40,363 95,772 158,369 170,290 30,915 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 9. Harvested Cropland by Size of Farm and Acres Harvested: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..............................................number, 2022: 266 336 139 14 161 712 56 318 2017: 354 360 162 27 189 806 61 352 acres harvested, 2022: 109,288 53,527 196,858 (D) 65,452 225,508 4,783 48,753 2017: 116,686 52,722 213,797 518 67,299 233,511 3,494 50,586 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY SIZE OF FARM : : 2022 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 24 57 7 1 15 108 8 52 acres harvested: 99 208 34 (D) (D) 388 25 192 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 67 127 20 10 47 167 24 94 acres harvested: 1,322 1,868 347 120 822 3,011 276 1,448 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 11 22 - 1 7 25 - 14 acres harvested: 397 686 - (D) 350 980 - 585 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 10 21 6 - 12 68 2 15 acres harvested: 641 1,063 330 - 835 3,729 (D) 541 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 13 8 3 - 2 40 4 12 acres harvested: 967 688 55 - (D) 3,193 243 831 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 6 14 9 1 9 31 4 10 acres harvested: 807 1,355 988 (D) 1,148 4,031 288 1,003 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 5 10 4 - 5 17 2 13 acres harvested: 654 1,879 154 - 629 2,444 (D) 1,205 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 3 5 7 - 4 20 - 6 acres harvested: 642 990 1,352 - 420 4,135 - 1,110 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 39 27 4 1 6 104 2 23 acres harvested: 10,148 5,550 855 (D) 1,018 27,168 (D) 4,730 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 27 18 17 - 25 62 4 20 acres harvested: 10,967 10,668 8,310 - 10,585 31,542 1,110 7,974 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 19 20 21 - 19 33 1 22 acres harvested: 12,599 19,237 9,672 - 15,137 30,947 (D) 10,529 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 42 7 41 - 10 37 5 37 acres harvested: 70,045 9,335 174,761 - 34,421 113,940 570 18,605 : 2017 size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 23 71 13 3 19 100 14 41 acres harvested: 70 239 (D) 3 57 308 (D) 152 10 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 97 129 19 19 39 168 17 109 acres harvested: 1,706 1,956 330 210 835 2,786 204 1,756 50 to 69 acres ........................................farms: 11 22 3 1 11 26 3 14 acres harvested: 447 842 125 (D) 424 734 87 546 70 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 18 25 2 - 5 71 5 16 acres harvested: 844 1,569 (D) - 276 3,657 (D) 789 100 to 139 acres ......................................farms: 8 13 4 - 10 75 3 20 acres harvested: 651 1,065 (D) - 571 5,952 200 1,357 140 to 179 acres ......................................farms: 13 5 3 2 6 44 6 15 acres harvested: 1,547 368 305 (D) 690 4,834 336 1,771 180 to 219 acres ......................................farms: 5 11 6 2 - 29 - 11 acres harvested: 418 1,682 602 (D) - 3,775 - 2,011 220 to 259 acres ......................................farms: 16 11 4 - 3 41 2 12 acres harvested: 3,122 1,429 592 - 326 7,655 (D) 1,174 260 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 52 23 8 - 39 119 5 29 acres harvested: 14,442 7,192 2,118 - 7,884 35,514 652 4,724 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 42 30 30 - 25 71 4 18 acres harvested: 18,286 20,818 11,835 - 11,283 37,522 645 6,216 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..................................farms: 23 10 22 - 20 26 2 27 acres harvested: 17,833 7,332 19,098 - 16,113 25,699 (D) 9,848 2,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 46 10 48 - 12 36 - 40 acres harvested: 57,320 8,230 178,533 - 28,840 105,075 - 20,242 : HARVESTED CROPLAND BY ACRES HARVESTED : : 2022 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 51 99 19 6 30 156 18 83 acres: 276 442 102 (D) 90 689 (D) 362 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 11 65 8 1 16 58 12 50 acres: 149 840 112 (D) 191 757 156 719 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 17 24 9 4 11 43 4 20 acres: 388 564 221 80 261 979 (D) 474 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 35 33 8 1 13 74 4 31 acres: 1,299 1,211 295 (D) 451 2,729 151 1,246 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 28 26 14 2 21 93 5 31 acres: 1,806 1,825 937 (D) 1,451 6,238 320 2,087 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 29 30 11 - 18 71 6 34 acres: 4,310 4,802 1,590 - 2,380 10,053 890 4,721 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 48 27 17 - 14 128 6 49 acres: 14,682 8,318 5,441 - 4,075 40,831 1,670 14,789 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 29 14 18 - 25 48 - 10 acres: 19,338 9,655 12,367 - 17,572 33,702 - 6,976 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 18 18 35 - 13 41 1 10 acres: 67,040 25,870 175,793 - 38,981 129,530 (D) 17,379 : 2017 acres harvested: : 1 to 9 acres ..........................................farms: 54 108 20 16 29 140 21 71 acres: 242 440 90 71 119 553 (D) 315 10 to 19 acres ........................................farms: 34 68 9 3 11 93 8 59 acres: 518 894 132 (D) 142 1,188 82 797 20 to 29 acres ........................................farms: 23 18 7 2 14 61 8 19 acres: 519 431 171 (D) 304 1,461 179 422 30 to 49 acres ........................................farms: 44 35 15 3 21 66 11 44 acres: 1,625 1,293 551 92 772 2,565 404 1,603 50 to 99 acres ........................................farms: 24 42 8 1 15 92 4 33 acres: 1,669 3,041 520 (D) 1,033 6,605 292 2,085 100 to 199 acres ......................................farms: 33 20 15 2 25 110 4 54 acres: 4,683 3,096 2,168 (D) 3,401 15,339 450 7,564 200 to 499 acres ......................................farms: 86 36 22 - 38 147 4 53 acres: 26,810 11,604 6,782 - 11,660 48,972 990 16,141 500 to 999 acres ......................................farms: 31 26 19 - 22 54 - 12 acres: 20,230 20,366 13,450 - 14,962 34,555 - 8,084 1,000 acres or more ...................................farms: 25 7 47 - 14 43 1 7 acres: 60,390 11,557 189,933 - 34,906 122,273 (D) 13,575 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 10. Irrigation: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Irrigated farms (see text) .........................number, 2022: 14,191 987 154 565 261 25 855 2017: 15,597 1,136 133 448 245 22 925 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2022: 7,245,166 67,004 123,646 141,372 192,457 3,981 498,402 2017: 7,513,974 101,526 136,132 187,713 221,228 2,462 521,324 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 10,460 662 110 388 230 20 559 2017: 11,425 797 87 283 214 22 632 acres, 2022: 3,405,694 32,982 13,418 42,723 59,892 1,511 323,695 2017: 3,577,459 56,838 14,146 60,045 74,593 623 342,476 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2022: 2,880 147 25 124 95 9 155 2017: 2,768 140 12 118 86 5 149 acres, 2022: 437,712 3,368 746 19,428 8,590 1,346 24,985 2017: 425,781 1,898 804 34,008 9,282 126 32,401 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2022: 8,495 563 130 382 189 11 548 2017: 9,896 681 114 363 200 11 617 acres, 2022: 2,991,538 25,388 101,175 69,294 119,715 86 121,510 2017: 3,119,130 34,857 108,624 74,985 131,422 315 128,790 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2022: 3,167,499 35,479 19,136 29,291 44,212 127 330,319 2017: 3,398,266 57,263 22,209 39,973 54,677 219 333,894 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 10,389 662 109 380 230 14 558 2017: 11,272 787 86 273 210 21 631 acres, 2022: 2,904,105 31,519 10,938 25,315 35,081 35 317,233 2017: 3,079,173 51,272 10,756 34,278 44,709 203 316,655 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2022: 6,620 506 89 297 85 13 478 2017: 7,841 633 81 274 101 5 535 acres, 2022: 263,394 3,960 8,198 3,976 9,131 92 13,086 2017: 319,093 5,991 11,453 5,695 9,968 16 17,239 : 2022 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 4,122 488 12 263 26 3 242 acres irrigated: 14,904 1,804 (D) 815 110 5 934 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 4,185 396 36 145 52 12 231 acres irrigated: 61,368 4,500 442 1,657 950 39 3,762 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 471 16 17 13 16 3 28 acres irrigated: 17,423 (D) 310 399 540 12 1,236 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 600 16 11 13 5 3 37 acres irrigated: 32,847 861 590 610 315 3 2,147 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 507 11 4 13 22 - 37 acres irrigated: 38,103 710 242 377 1,125 - 3,170 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 464 3 11 14 9 - 30 acres irrigated: 50,455 (D) 424 1,429 346 - 4,058 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 290 8 5 15 16 - 13 acres irrigated: 36,551 803 632 1,275 1,489 - 2,231 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 254 10 1 11 8 - 9 acres irrigated: 39,723 1,507 (D) 815 811 - 1,479 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 938 12 19 24 35 - 69 acres irrigated: 218,750 2,085 1,249 3,006 5,031 - 19,021 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 834 10 9 22 28 4 49 acres irrigated: 354,563 3,730 1,990 3,458 7,621 68 21,301 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 668 11 15 15 18 - 37 acres irrigated: 505,366 11,772 5,123 3,378 6,746 - 41,090 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 858 6 14 17 26 - 73 acres irrigated: 1,797,446 6,923 8,056 12,072 19,128 - 229,890 : 2017 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 4,350 578 13 156 8 5 258 acres irrigated: 17,031 2,268 36 600 35 14 1,068 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 4,529 406 34 104 49 7 260 acres irrigated: 69,961 4,931 583 1,193 795 24 4,664 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 532 29 7 10 5 - 29 acres irrigated: 21,279 1,162 212 460 46 - 1,388 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 723 39 4 12 17 3 53 acres irrigated: 42,994 2,568 204 548 540 3 3,714 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 538 14 7 17 19 4 19 acres irrigated: 42,087 1,289 615 784 993 72 1,914 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 488 1 9 13 10 - 21 acres irrigated: 50,695 (D) 344 879 633 - 2,398 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 298 6 2 9 6 - 15 acres irrigated: 42,435 1,010 (D) 393 907 - 2,526 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 325 9 1 10 9 - 16 acres irrigated: 54,100 (D) (D) 1,109 1,110 - 2,398 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 1,148 15 9 45 36 1 48 acres irrigated: 271,111 3,546 904 3,799 4,277 (D) 13,395 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 1,109 16 21 27 39 2 74 acres irrigated: 470,714 7,487 4,574 4,533 10,956 (D) 30,354 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 720 11 11 22 10 - 58 acres irrigated: 551,917 10,353 2,168 8,528 3,895 - 52,833 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 837 12 15 23 37 - 74 acres irrigated: 1,763,942 22,137 12,154 17,147 30,490 - 217,242 : Land with irrigation systems or equipment : present (see text) .................................farms, 2022: 14,784 1,016 164 593 270 29 897 acres, 2022: 3,391,992 37,108 20,883 34,344 48,529 195 339,511 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Irrigated farms (see text) .........................number, 2022: 177 63 168 687 56 125 48 2017: 154 55 181 842 49 158 59 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2022: 238,770 42,255 17,434 307,387 11,475 96,218 162,635 2017: 180,845 19,959 7,676 281,704 16,565 123,796 140,390 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 144 43 142 494 54 106 44 2017: 128 36 155 591 46 154 44 acres, 2022: 52,396 774 3,557 164,400 5,644 57,766 64,768 2017: 37,802 668 2,742 147,557 10,505 69,677 55,785 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2022: 45 8 43 104 22 29 25 2017: 38 4 39 129 29 68 26 acres, 2022: 3,706 145 693 19,725 890 1,545 9,183 2017: 6,801 (D) 267 20,707 3,119 5,079 7,404 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2022: 102 46 104 420 13 63 19 2017: 77 29 88 508 15 76 39 acres, 2022: 173,672 33,890 2,140 108,835 245 31,043 77,433 2017: 127,818 15,248 1,318 101,893 (D) 42,685 68,286 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2022: 65,992 1,537 1,104 143,393 2,500 58,948 32,523 2017: 37,293 1,311 1,191 131,619 2,290 69,359 27,412 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 144 41 131 487 52 106 41 2017: 128 35 139 580 44 154 44 acres, 2022: 52,089 719 781 125,797 2,429 57,613 25,774 2017: 29,606 513 813 120,431 2,208 67,092 25,267 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2022: 71 31 48 360 6 32 15 2017: 56 25 53 450 7 38 18 acres, 2022: 13,903 818 323 17,596 71 1,335 6,749 2017: 7,687 798 378 11,188 82 2,267 2,145 : 2022 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 31 26 44 237 16 13 3 acres irrigated: 110 94 71 850 26 42 (D) 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 55 14 60 245 20 17 3 acres irrigated: 764 154 174 3,176 59 227 22 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 2 - 11 14 3 1 - acres irrigated: (D) - 81 (D) 3 (D) - 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 7 - 11 18 3 8 6 acres irrigated: 208 - 40 1,205 30 489 339 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 7 8 15 20 1 2 - acres irrigated: 664 230 141 2,250 (D) (D) - 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 7 1 3 21 2 7 - acres irrigated: 758 (D) 89 2,638 (D) 872 - 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: - 4 1 1 1 6 - acres irrigated: - 350 (D) (D) (D) 1,057 - 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 1 - 4 12 - 9 1 acres irrigated: (D) - 111 1,724 - 1,535 (D) : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 12 2 12 20 3 21 3 acres irrigated: 2,591 (D) 341 5,154 3 5,425 496 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 6 2 1 32 4 5 11 acres irrigated: 2,778 (D) (D) 12,318 529 930 3,756 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 22 - 6 28 1 24 5 acres irrigated: 16,864 - (D) 18,661 (D) 22,115 2,689 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 27 6 - 39 2 12 16 acres irrigated: 41,078 615 - 94,847 (D) 26,101 25,178 : 2017 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 33 32 59 314 8 11 4 acres irrigated: 126 135 88 1,339 15 59 (D) 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 42 12 97 294 22 17 1 acres irrigated: 763 151 254 3,822 42 330 (D) 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 3 1 3 29 4 11 6 acres irrigated: (D) (D) 108 1,181 83 561 168 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 8 - 2 22 - 8 2 acres irrigated: 532 - (D) 1,473 - 472 (D) : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 8 - 5 12 3 11 8 acres irrigated: 663 - 56 1,222 (D) 876 130 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 4 2 2 27 3 5 - acres irrigated: 425 (D) (D) 2,121 160 595 - 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 1 1 2 13 1 3 3 acres irrigated: (D) (D) (D) 2,122 (D) 462 250 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: - 1 3 5 - 16 - acres irrigated: - (D) 60 988 - 2,872 - : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 5 1 7 39 1 14 4 acres irrigated: 758 (D) 192 10,785 (D) 3,313 448 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 15 1 1 28 3 14 9 acres irrigated: 5,760 (D) (D) 12,264 (D) 6,294 1,564 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 16 - - 32 - 34 7 acres irrigated: 6,892 - - 20,701 - 35,556 3,161 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 19 4 - 27 4 14 15 acres irrigated: 21,292 745 - 73,601 (D) 17,969 21,679 : Land with irrigation systems or equipment : present (see text) .................................farms, 2022: 179 65 196 707 64 127 51 acres, 2022: 71,025 2,061 1,594 151,297 6,163 60,308 39,264 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Irrigated farms (see text) .........................number, 2022: 1,913 176 409 36 19 193 190 2017: 2,000 202 466 35 18 217 206 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2022: 269,289 243,854 567,002 130,767 1,056 104,018 252,370 2017: 268,646 247,652 512,264 72,216 1,216 131,358 294,091 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 1,166 159 341 27 17 138 128 2017: 1,237 171 362 27 15 172 162 acres, 2022: 203,509 98,848 292,662 51,204 56 30,101 80,780 2017: 202,226 104,868 274,274 34,303 130 36,795 118,841 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2022: 316 76 99 8 3 39 38 2017: 287 83 80 5 3 38 29 acres, 2022: 14,026 30,074 46,033 13,697 (D) 3,435 15,932 2017: 11,210 36,180 36,632 573 15 4,450 8,811 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2022: 1,207 107 223 29 8 140 117 2017: 1,284 147 282 16 14 174 123 acres, 2022: 36,815 93,909 211,091 63,206 126 59,180 138,357 2017: 40,657 98,032 187,985 35,202 439 78,815 157,076 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2022: 207,577 54,189 274,053 48,780 45 44,972 78,012 2017: 213,410 61,146 259,331 31,603 (D) 60,089 113,157 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 1,166 158 341 27 16 138 128 2017: 1,219 170 356 27 13 172 162 acres, 2022: 193,077 48,152 268,475 44,545 (D) 29,531 73,699 2017: 192,582 50,781 250,853 30,588 (D) 36,635 104,447 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2022: 1,069 46 141 12 3 105 90 2017: 1,161 74 178 8 5 119 82 acres, 2022: 14,500 6,037 5,578 4,235 (D) 15,441 4,313 2017: 20,828 10,365 8,478 1,015 (D) 23,454 8,710 : 2022 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 813 15 64 - 2 21 64 acres irrigated: 2,964 51 220 - (D) 97 239 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 659 25 82 - 10 48 41 acres irrigated: 9,743 315 1,515 - (D) 700 421 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 47 4 12 - 3 11 5 acres irrigated: 1,863 130 627 - 15 435 85 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 59 3 19 - 2 8 4 acres irrigated: 3,748 184 1,207 - (D) 364 98 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 45 4 11 - - 14 - acres irrigated: 4,080 226 1,066 - - 977 - 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 39 9 18 2 1 8 6 acres irrigated: 4,766 616 1,972 (D) (D) 1,050 960 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 26 5 8 - - 10 3 acres irrigated: 3,680 462 896 - - 1,280 383 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 22 11 7 2 - 4 5 acres irrigated: 4,049 1,509 1,147 (D) - 743 968 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 69 20 41 5 1 21 11 acres irrigated: 20,259 2,899 10,381 860 (D) 5,546 1,281 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 70 17 22 4 - 27 10 acres irrigated: 40,558 4,620 10,369 1,170 - 11,322 3,862 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 42 20 43 3 - 12 10 acres irrigated: 48,350 7,323 26,393 1,906 - 8,200 6,712 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 22 43 82 20 - 9 31 acres irrigated: 63,517 35,854 218,260 44,130 - 14,258 63,003 : 2017 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 866 22 108 - 1 15 52 acres irrigated: 3,409 132 356 - (D) 49 267 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 652 22 104 2 12 47 58 acres irrigated: 10,501 264 1,676 (D) 28 818 803 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 57 3 8 - - 15 1 acres irrigated: 2,379 168 330 - - 660 (D) 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 66 1 12 - 1 10 13 acres irrigated: 4,020 (D) 695 - (D) 413 510 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 52 4 13 - - 13 4 acres irrigated: 4,533 203 1,319 - - 949 269 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 44 3 9 1 - 12 10 acres irrigated: 5,067 315 1,013 (D) - 950 818 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 18 2 12 1 4 5 2 acres irrigated: 2,452 (D) 2,006 (D) 4 821 (D) 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 26 7 15 1 - 8 2 acres irrigated: 4,397 722 2,874 (D) - 1,750 (D) : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 75 33 47 4 - 27 19 acres irrigated: 21,587 4,029 13,547 1,120 - 6,865 2,818 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 85 36 20 11 - 37 7 acres irrigated: 50,601 9,828 8,135 5,219 - 14,752 3,576 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 39 33 53 4 - 13 16 acres irrigated: 48,142 12,368 39,524 2,383 - 13,574 15,173 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 20 36 65 11 - 15 22 acres irrigated: 56,322 32,899 187,856 22,578 - 18,488 88,440 : Land with irrigation systems or equipment : present (see text) .................................farms, 2022: 1,997 185 425 36 19 196 193 acres, 2022: 224,462 61,949 288,946 53,259 49 46,513 87,920 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Irrigated farms (see text) .........................number, 2022: 441 307 592 410 64 565 384 261 2017: 516 356 701 423 66 650 420 236 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2022: 169,400 193,136 124,469 191,018 49,172 244,554 174,712 32,319 2017: 176,887 212,044 129,048 174,426 65,203 311,772 165,514 34,140 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 397 253 426 290 54 450 276 208 2017: 436 277 460 322 29 505 317 176 acres, 2022: 67,935 136,310 19,791 125,314 5,198 170,382 132,964 19,315 2017: 84,797 129,446 23,289 119,025 1,647 202,560 129,084 24,889 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2022: 123 58 104 67 19 108 49 68 2017: 156 68 78 51 8 104 42 45 acres, 2022: 11,904 10,159 3,918 8,015 1,994 5,947 7,836 1,097 2017: 20,339 10,408 2,397 4,902 1,211 14,100 2,160 3,592 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2022: 264 159 374 267 40 301 217 113 2017: 318 204 470 287 54 391 233 118 acres, 2022: 79,305 37,334 94,877 41,533 35,025 55,887 27,823 3,081 2017: 55,729 64,759 94,227 34,494 55,760 76,392 17,535 2,139 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2022: 50,893 96,574 25,735 132,731 1,409 143,448 139,509 6,315 2017: 65,276 101,916 29,919 121,765 2,673 198,301 134,860 13,659 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 393 252 425 290 50 450 276 202 2017: 430 275 458 322 26 500 317 169 acres, 2022: 48,335 89,163 19,324 124,381 1,059 138,768 132,147 5,655 2017: 60,419 91,091 21,371 113,624 889 191,533 127,085 12,852 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2022: 148 126 317 233 26 231 185 86 2017: 180 169 405 252 46 313 204 88 acres, 2022: 2,558 7,411 6,411 8,350 350 4,680 7,362 660 2017: 4,857 10,825 8,548 8,141 1,784 6,768 7,775 807 : 2022 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 104 42 257 81 9 155 89 100 acres irrigated: 384 158 1,022 346 23 672 307 283 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 121 72 189 121 27 182 97 113 acres irrigated: 1,865 1,221 2,955 2,510 78 2,669 1,803 707 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 19 17 19 24 3 31 5 3 acres irrigated: 714 889 715 771 31 1,148 192 70 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 22 20 30 18 8 16 20 12 acres irrigated: 900 1,109 1,345 1,039 26 912 1,332 116 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 13 22 18 24 - 26 13 7 acres irrigated: 724 2,372 1,152 2,015 - 2,092 1,162 136 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 16 29 9 8 2 19 10 1 acres irrigated: 1,343 3,434 1,007 948 (D) 2,334 1,338 (D) 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 21 9 3 10 4 8 11 1 acres irrigated: 1,200 1,276 172 1,240 14 1,221 1,611 (D) 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 17 6 3 7 - 3 7 4 acres irrigated: 2,772 1,093 580 1,574 - 520 1,283 134 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 32 34 16 38 1 32 42 5 acres irrigated: 4,107 7,462 3,921 10,455 (D) 7,768 12,312 (D) 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 37 19 24 39 1 33 43 9 acres irrigated: 12,424 7,342 6,089 21,294 (D) 18,534 21,757 1,093 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 22 7 9 14 - 24 26 5 acres irrigated: 9,282 4,521 3,519 18,969 - 23,991 26,437 2,890 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 17 30 15 26 9 36 21 1 acres irrigated: 15,178 65,697 3,258 71,570 1,206 81,587 69,975 (D) : 2017 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 104 61 321 64 2 151 107 86 acres irrigated: 411 262 1,426 269 (D) 648 394 248 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 97 79 217 156 29 215 89 99 acres irrigated: 1,473 1,476 3,224 3,323 205 3,904 1,596 871 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 28 18 10 11 5 34 18 10 acres irrigated: 773 922 392 528 33 1,539 680 189 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 26 30 39 15 2 33 26 10 acres irrigated: 1,271 1,846 2,440 903 (D) 2,159 1,753 39 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 25 9 22 16 1 25 13 1 acres irrigated: 1,812 590 1,922 1,146 (D) 2,251 1,316 (D) 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 44 23 15 18 5 25 17 4 acres irrigated: 4,374 2,894 1,924 2,341 47 2,971 2,453 270 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 8 13 10 26 6 9 7 1 acres irrigated: 1,117 2,124 1,464 3,432 1,200 1,610 1,053 (D) 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 22 11 9 14 - 3 8 1 acres irrigated: 2,612 2,103 1,106 2,479 - 520 1,831 (D) : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 62 41 20 38 1 34 56 10 acres irrigated: 8,134 8,756 4,639 11,287 (D) 9,140 16,302 644 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 53 39 14 26 2 48 42 7 acres irrigated: 17,642 16,575 3,620 13,755 (D) 26,461 23,068 1,613 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 36 6 11 15 - 35 20 4 acres irrigated: 16,064 5,854 3,763 13,980 - 34,340 23,826 1,818 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 11 26 13 24 13 38 17 3 acres irrigated: 9,593 58,514 3,999 68,322 873 112,758 60,588 7,635 : Land with irrigation systems or equipment : present (see text) .................................farms, 2022: 466 344 615 418 67 573 394 283 acres, 2022: 56,302 109,153 28,952 137,262 1,450 150,610 151,517 11,310 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Irrigated farms (see text) .........................number, 2022: 89 244 13 167 315 389 78 206 2017: 48 304 2 227 378 543 91 235 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2022: 2,990 128,831 2,269 93,649 154,647 303,526 29,876 160,683 2017: 3,139 167,098 (D) 121,524 175,268 262,238 30,735 155,663 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 85 166 13 135 268 296 53 192 2017: 45 220 1 194 319 407 67 205 acres, 2022: 378 32,381 927 50,547 122,194 238,687 7,365 42,455 2017: 688 40,269 (D) 73,673 138,949 228,395 4,943 39,844 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2022: 34 33 6 34 84 62 20 85 2017: 11 32 1 49 66 62 7 82 acres, 2022: 753 1,712 654 5,385 9,312 34,328 881 16,442 2017: 534 1,102 (D) 5,324 10,686 10,465 1,379 24,031 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2022: 28 183 5 114 118 205 46 134 2017: 27 245 2 170 194 285 54 178 acres, 2022: 524 86,928 (D) 31,495 17,474 26,122 11,672 100,262 2017: 571 116,952 (D) 36,183 21,323 19,668 15,631 85,155 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2022: 424 60,672 379 55,844 83,468 239,043 411 29,319 2017: 158 72,204 (D) 77,324 125,913 232,707 1,091 25,738 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 84 165 9 135 268 296 53 192 2017: 39 213 1 194 318 405 64 198 acres, 2022: (D) 30,891 260 49,525 80,324 233,677 299 27,692 2017: 111 39,293 (D) 70,772 122,384 226,327 956 24,083 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2022: 8 162 5 75 83 173 35 62 2017: 9 213 1 119 153 238 38 82 acres, 2022: (D) 29,781 119 6,319 3,144 5,366 112 1,627 2017: 47 32,911 (D) 6,552 3,529 6,380 135 1,655 : 2022 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 45 35 2 13 57 99 47 26 acres irrigated: 62 116 (D) 46 173 379 113 95 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 30 79 3 24 66 99 15 49 acres irrigated: 110 1,269 (D) 348 1,229 1,853 74 731 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 1 4 1 9 16 10 - 6 acres irrigated: (D) 101 (D) 396 694 469 - 284 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 2 10 1 8 15 11 3 16 acres irrigated: (D) 396 (D) 510 1,057 806 38 1,057 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 7 14 - 8 13 24 1 10 acres irrigated: 40 1,062 - 872 931 2,234 (D) 476 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 1 14 - 18 24 12 6 13 acres irrigated: (D) 850 - 2,232 3,475 1,515 6 1,210 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: - 3 4 7 6 14 - 7 acres irrigated: - 431 14 1,140 998 2,536 - 1,354 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 2 8 - 7 7 10 - 9 acres irrigated: (D) 1,309 - 716 1,057 2,180 - 719 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 1 27 1 24 37 23 - 12 acres irrigated: (D) 6,379 (D) 6,235 11,375 6,190 - 899 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: - 26 1 19 30 25 - 21 acres irrigated: - 10,355 (D) 8,786 14,016 14,805 - 6,261 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: - 14 - 20 22 35 2 19 acres irrigated: - 8,758 - 13,853 20,709 38,482 (D) 10,308 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: - 10 - 10 22 27 4 18 acres irrigated: - 29,646 - 20,710 27,754 167,594 125 5,925 : 2017 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 17 36 - 12 66 132 53 13 acres irrigated: 19 164 - 86 224 578 139 58 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 19 102 1 51 113 135 21 64 acres irrigated: 49 1,504 (D) 863 1,897 2,888 107 930 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 3 17 - 10 15 13 - 11 acres irrigated: (D) 614 - 323 686 513 - 361 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: - 11 - 11 25 35 3 17 acres irrigated: - 414 - 702 1,867 2,285 90 970 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 3 16 - 11 13 13 1 10 acres irrigated: (D) 1,442 - 1,067 1,283 1,316 (D) 514 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 1 10 1 19 5 14 2 18 acres irrigated: (D) 768 (D) 1,874 539 1,953 (D) 1,543 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: - 2 - 7 14 16 - 8 acres irrigated: - (D) - 1,197 2,500 2,084 - 972 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: - 2 - 7 7 22 1 4 acres irrigated: - (D) - 1,097 1,484 5,085 (D) 621 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 4 40 - 28 40 51 1 13 acres irrigated: 50 9,834 - 6,945 11,190 15,479 (D) 1,789 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 1 40 - 41 36 56 1 33 acres irrigated: (D) 13,603 - 15,850 17,777 36,109 (D) 3,953 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: - 12 - 20 20 30 - 31 acres irrigated: - 11,184 - 12,523 21,514 32,703 - 8,312 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: - 16 - 10 24 26 8 13 acres irrigated: - 32,156 - 34,797 64,952 131,714 (D) 5,715 : Land with irrigation systems or equipment : present (see text) .................................farms, 2022: 100 267 13 173 315 401 92 211 acres, 2022: 470 63,023 381 58,929 89,635 253,077 702 33,595 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 10. Irrigation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Irrigated farms (see text) .........................number, 2022: 373 483 132 6 162 965 77 361 2017: 467 538 146 10 189 1,052 92 356 Land in irrigated farms .............................acres, 2022: 486,369 (D) 256,143 66 84,545 433,902 (D) 279,705 2017: 505,591 160,361 283,926 (D) 99,347 433,175 43,833 333,636 : Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 264 336 113 4 143 712 43 311 2017: 352 352 128 4 160 790 34 290 acres, 2022: 109,188 53,527 149,522 20 61,969 225,508 4,612 48,519 2017: 116,212 52,662 174,893 (D) 65,647 233,347 3,010 45,270 Other cropland, excluding cropland pastured .......farms, 2022: 56 100 64 2 40 167 14 73 2017: 84 73 59 1 56 183 8 74 acres, 2022: 11,353 4,204 59,008 (D) 4,172 14,995 388 5,661 2017: 8,760 1,542 44,459 (D) 10,291 15,591 47 12,450 Pastureland, excluding woodland pastured ..........farms, 2022: 226 298 62 2 80 568 55 215 2017: 290 350 76 7 125 667 79 214 acres, 2022: 342,807 76,747 36,838 (D) 11,070 174,331 25,222 207,393 2017: 350,123 100,266 57,589 315 16,782 170,891 35,243 256,695 : Irrigated land ......................................acres, 2022: 108,395 62,350 115,184 9 40,705 236,196 15,245 51,052 2017: 119,002 59,150 147,746 69 48,896 241,479 22,112 38,818 Harvested cropland ................................farms, 2022: 263 336 111 4 141 712 42 311 2017: 350 351 128 3 155 788 33 284 acres, 2022: 101,110 53,493 113,356 (D) 38,910 222,065 3,872 46,749 2017: 104,845 50,212 145,974 3 43,938 223,649 2,842 35,201 Pastureland and other land ........................farms, 2022: 177 266 46 2 47 453 48 129 2017: 221 319 41 7 83 546 71 140 acres, 2022: 7,285 8,857 1,828 (D) 1,795 14,131 11,373 4,303 2017: 14,157 8,938 1,772 66 4,958 17,830 19,270 3,617 : 2022 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 64 136 16 1 14 258 10 79 acres irrigated: 251 542 56 (D) (D) 1,016 17 304 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 108 177 22 5 54 247 28 106 acres irrigated: 2,140 3,059 332 (D) 770 4,623 572 1,751 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 13 26 - - 9 35 - 14 acres irrigated: 421 1,141 - - 333 1,443 - 692 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 19 27 6 - 9 72 8 14 acres irrigated: 1,266 1,598 510 - 595 4,915 348 519 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 21 10 5 - 2 41 3 11 acres irrigated: 1,493 988 270 - (D) 3,678 203 741 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 6 16 6 - 9 34 5 15 acres irrigated: 863 1,475 718 - 1,323 4,378 354 1,010 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 5 10 4 - 7 17 4 13 acres irrigated: 743 1,879 (D) - 926 2,947 560 1,460 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 5 5 7 - 3 21 - 6 acres irrigated: 804 967 1,352 - 300 4,191 - 1,163 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 41 31 2 - 6 107 3 23 acres irrigated: 11,139 7,366 (D) - 968 29,341 895 5,123 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 27 18 17 - 24 63 5 20 acres irrigated: 12,184 10,698 7,643 - 8,269 33,492 950 8,015 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 21 20 20 - 15 33 5 23 acres irrigated: 13,051 20,002 7,906 - 8,677 31,793 4,271 10,572 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 43 7 27 - 10 37 6 37 acres irrigated: 64,040 12,635 95,848 - 18,448 114,379 7,075 19,702 : 2017 irrigated acres by size of farm: : 1 to 9 acres ............................................farms: 43 155 23 3 21 243 18 76 acres irrigated: 143 564 82 3 (D) 896 77 280 10 to 49 acres ..........................................farms: 154 210 21 4 36 250 18 107 acres irrigated: 2,555 3,829 363 11 708 4,431 344 1,745 50 to 69 acres ..........................................farms: 15 28 3 - 15 35 - 12 acres irrigated: 705 1,368 115 - 596 1,455 - 492 70 to 99 acres ..........................................farms: 26 30 2 1 10 75 10 13 acres irrigated: 1,496 2,020 (D) (D) 464 5,125 609 646 : 100 to 139 acres ........................................farms: 20 14 4 - 9 78 2 19 acres irrigated: 1,009 1,287 175 - 462 6,935 (D) 1,320 140 to 179 acres ........................................farms: 14 6 1 2 6 44 7 11 acres irrigated: 1,704 480 (D) (D) 501 5,423 558 1,585 180 to 219 acres ........................................farms: 5 11 6 - - 31 2 10 acres irrigated: 812 1,826 602 - - 4,485 (D) 1,722 220 to 259 acres ........................................farms: 16 11 1 - 2 42 2 11 acres irrigated: 3,182 1,776 (D) - (D) 8,233 (D) 1,654 : 260 to 499 acres ........................................farms: 58 23 8 - 37 120 8 25 acres irrigated: 17,486 7,240 2,051 - 7,023 35,874 1,873 3,876 500 to 999 acres ........................................farms: 44 30 28 - 23 72 13 14 acres irrigated: 17,936 19,738 9,808 - 8,800 38,648 4,713 4,476 1,000 to 1,999 acres ....................................farms: 25 10 16 - 19 26 5 20 acres irrigated: 19,411 8,215 14,271 - 12,235 26,564 2,318 7,771 2,000 acres or more .....................................farms: 47 10 33 - 11 36 7 38 acres irrigated: 52,563 10,807 120,042 - 17,735 103,410 11,160 13,251 : Land with irrigation systems or equipment : present (see text) .................................farms, 2022: 383 496 150 8 168 983 83 372 acres, 2022: 112,557 66,185 121,146 13 50,056 252,094 15,641 52,552 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2022: 8,956 412 96 381 163 68 510 2017: 10,076 464 109 322 230 72 590 number, 2022: 2,517,987 58,038 15,491 17,136 18,118 1,004 74,940 2017: 2,435,137 52,082 16,516 20,981 28,175 973 97,759 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..........................................farms, 2022: 3,651 279 26 207 25 39 185 2017: 3,901 311 32 115 41 39 202 number, 2022: 15,867 1,151 98 752 125 179 780 2017: 17,098 1,221 172 470 204 189 871 10 to 19 ........................................farms, 2022: 1,340 62 13 58 17 16 78 2017: 1,534 69 5 63 23 18 75 number, 2022: 17,768 807 175 771 227 193 1,038 2017: 20,440 920 62 885 347 (D) 922 20 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 1,429 35 11 53 40 5 91 2017: 1,669 43 20 55 62 13 94 number, 2022: 44,309 1,000 349 1,646 1,425 119 2,768 2017: 51,322 1,161 628 1,715 1,867 409 2,672 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: 770 14 7 13 27 8 51 2017: 894 13 15 34 32 2 64 number, 2022: 53,469 950 513 876 1,751 513 3,430 2017: 62,358 923 997 2,223 2,003 (D) 4,260 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: 606 4 17 22 26 - 36 2017: 707 5 18 25 26 - 48 number, 2022: 84,931 452 2,677 3,041 3,763 - 4,993 2017: 99,263 607 2,589 3,323 3,453 - 6,388 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 607 6 15 23 23 - 40 2017: 761 5 13 24 35 - 71 number, 2022: 180,269 1,782 4,396 6,420 6,480 - 12,967 2017: 229,351 1,065 4,333 7,268 10,441 - 23,985 500 or more .....................................farms, 2022: 553 12 7 5 5 - 29 2017: 610 18 6 6 11 - 36 number, 2022: 2,121,374 51,896 7,283 3,630 4,347 - 48,964 2017: 1,955,305 46,185 7,735 5,097 9,860 - 58,661 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2022: 7,712 308 79 318 159 61 444 2017: 8,613 363 83 279 207 71 490 number, 2022: 1,113,728 22,807 8,529 11,374 13,285 613 34,599 2017: 1,101,801 24,963 9,034 13,596 20,128 623 48,531 : Beef cows .......................................farms, 2022: 7,379 294 79 308 156 61 428 2017: 8,149 350 83 272 191 71 455 number, 2022: 449,249 4,427 (D) 11,344 12,808 613 28,871 2017: 497,984 7,403 (D) 12,713 18,911 617 41,571 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 3,402 227 29 160 34 45 176 number: 13,272 812 140 (D) 155 156 690 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 1,044 30 2 45 17 6 59 number: 13,876 398 (D) 566 251 (D) 805 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 1,299 23 15 54 43 8 96 number: 38,826 706 483 1,533 1,397 275 2,907 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 581 7 13 15 23 2 34 number: 41,093 455 968 1,126 1,731 (D) 2,362 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 517 2 8 18 22 - 22 number: 71,618 (D) 1,004 2,490 3,036 - 3,411 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 375 4 9 14 14 - 28 number: 108,591 1,003 2,851 3,921 3,818 - 8,096 500 or more .......................................farms: 161 1 3 2 3 - 13 number: 161,973 (D) 3,058 (D) 2,420 - 10,600 : Milk cows .......................................farms, 2022: 549 20 2 17 11 - 21 2017: 785 22 2 19 26 6 52 number, 2022: 664,479 18,380 (D) 30 477 - 5,728 2017: 603,817 17,560 (D) 883 1,217 6 6,960 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 259 10 2 17 2 - 5 number: 485 18 (D) 30 (D) - 7 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 6 - - - - - 2 number: 82 - - - - - (D) 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 15 - - - 4 - 1 number: 545 - - - (D) - (D) 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 17 - - - 5 - 2 number: 1,264 - - - 324 - (D) 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 27 - - - - - 6 number: 3,824 - - - - - 800 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 58 - - - - - 2 number: 20,213 - - - - - (D) 500 or more .......................................farms: 167 10 - - - - 3 number: 638,066 18,362 - - - - (D) : Other cattle ......................................farms, 2022: 6,745 260 84 249 133 46 376 2017: 7,499 283 96 231 196 51 434 number, 2022: 1,404,259 35,231 6,962 5,762 4,833 391 40,341 2017: 1,333,336 27,119 7,482 7,385 8,047 350 49,228 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 3,360 174 29 166 45 35 175 number: 13,551 648 147 591 (D) 136 720 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 996 43 9 30 39 4 52 number: 13,072 520 (D) 388 508 57 673 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 1,042 22 14 23 21 7 66 number: 31,259 632 478 684 657 198 1,978 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 479 5 12 17 14 - 33 number: 32,286 (D) 874 1,130 981 - 2,128 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 319 3 9 10 12 - 18 number: 42,698 357 1,199 1,363 1,636 - 2,547 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 245 2 9 1 2 - 18 number: 74,095 (D) 2,588 (D) (D) - 5,642 500 or more .........................................farms: 304 11 2 2 - - 14 number: 1,197,298 32,133 (D) (D) - - 26,653 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2022: 61 60 226 272 120 64 25 2017: 55 37 260 275 122 77 41 number, 2022: 11,572 3,212 3,797 74,787 4,599 7,525 5,333 2017: 9,641 2,415 4,100 58,072 4,914 9,138 5,813 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..........................................farms, 2022: 12 26 126 121 51 9 2 2017: 8 15 162 115 47 17 15 number, 2022: (D) (D) (D) 529 (D) 51 (D) 2017: 30 73 696 478 211 124 88 10 to 19 ........................................farms, 2022: 2 9 53 41 25 9 2 2017: 1 4 56 39 24 8 8 number, 2022: (D) 133 654 542 331 121 (D) 2017: (D) 63 741 519 325 123 122 20 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 13 12 39 42 26 20 7 2017: 16 6 27 49 30 22 6 number, 2022: 352 327 1,267 1,291 903 724 (D) 2017: 515 174 768 1,574 1,032 663 173 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: 6 2 6 22 8 7 6 2017: 8 4 10 26 9 7 6 number, 2022: 393 (D) 450 1,564 446 505 (D) 2017: (D) 215 696 1,645 608 494 420 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: 8 5 - 16 2 9 6 2017: 7 5 4 17 5 12 2 number, 2022: 1,094 (D) - 2,419 (D) 1,292 764 2017: 972 681 (D) 2,261 674 1,586 (D) 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 13 6 2 17 8 6 - 2017: 9 2 - 15 7 5 2 number, 2022: 4,062 1,917 (D) 5,091 2,312 1,503 - 2017: 2,564 (D) - 4,554 2,064 1,491 (D) 500 or more .....................................farms, 2022: 7 - - 13 - 4 2 2017: 6 1 1 14 - 6 2 number, 2022: 5,593 - - 63,351 - 3,329 (D) 2017: 4,933 (D) (D) 47,041 - 4,657 (D) : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2022: 53 53 196 236 108 56 21 2017: 53 35 226 227 116 65 35 number, 2022: 7,650 2,134 2,044 21,463 2,819 4,555 4,387 2017: 5,908 1,671 2,475 15,690 3,061 5,384 4,219 : Beef cows .......................................farms, 2022: 53 53 184 231 104 56 21 2017: 53 35 219 223 108 64 35 number, 2022: 7,650 2,134 1,975 21,037 2,741 4,555 (D) 2017: 5,908 1,671 2,407 15,234 3,036 (D) 4,219 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 6 28 131 118 45 11 2 number: 39 83 492 438 163 (D) (D) 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 9 3 25 28 24 9 1 number: 121 36 318 403 327 139 (D) 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 7 11 25 41 25 17 9 number: 226 258 637 1,301 676 643 260 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 4 2 1 14 - 6 1 number: 236 (D) (D) 1,075 - 471 (D) 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 14 7 - 17 7 8 6 number: 1,742 1,081 - 2,314 820 1,056 676 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 9 2 2 10 3 3 1 number: 2,601 (D) (D) 3,006 755 1,036 (D) 500 or more .......................................farms: 4 - - 3 - 2 1 number: 2,685 - - 12,500 - (D) (D) : Milk cows .......................................farms, 2022: - - 19 17 4 - 1 2017: - - 16 4 17 1 - number, 2022: - - 69 426 78 - (D) 2017: - - 68 456 25 (D) - 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: - - 17 15 2 - 1 number: - - (D) (D) (D) - (D) 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: - - 2 - 2 - - number: - - (D) - (D) - - 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 200 to 499 ........................................farms: - - - 2 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 500 or more .......................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - : Other cattle ......................................farms, 2022: 55 46 178 193 87 59 24 2017: 47 25 169 203 87 74 38 number, 2022: 3,922 1,078 1,753 53,324 1,780 2,970 946 2017: 3,733 744 1,625 42,382 1,853 3,754 1,594 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 15 26 139 102 53 24 12 number: (D) 127 542 409 217 (D) (D) 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 15 7 19 25 13 10 2 number: 194 (D) 252 (D) (D) 158 (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 9 9 16 30 13 8 4 number: 267 275 419 894 346 244 (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 4 1 2 19 2 12 5 number: 210 (D) (D) 1,354 (D) 885 288 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 7 3 - 1 6 1 - number: 1,009 503 - (D) 877 (D) - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 3 - 2 9 - 4 1 number: 616 - (D) 2,883 - 1,471 (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: 2 - - 7 - - - number: (D) - - 47,287 - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2022: 1,064 158 265 36 78 99 137 2017: 1,025 171 283 33 102 142 167 number, 2022: 139,467 23,951 264,897 11,884 3,102 22,433 180,088 2017: 137,348 25,146 283,514 8,134 2,911 31,167 169,986 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..........................................farms, 2022: 676 26 71 2 30 16 57 2017: 643 41 78 4 55 33 83 number, 2022: 2,977 101 324 (D) 147 53 199 2017: 2,769 189 353 15 217 171 360 10 to 19 ........................................farms, 2022: 139 34 39 - 13 8 9 2017: 136 15 31 4 23 7 16 number, 2022: 1,828 527 521 - 158 117 112 2017: 1,762 229 442 49 306 86 184 20 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 136 19 46 7 16 12 28 2017: 121 30 52 6 9 16 28 number, 2022: 4,050 596 1,470 (D) 534 337 781 2017: 3,733 994 1,508 179 273 517 933 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: 33 26 18 7 11 18 6 2017: 53 18 17 8 9 16 6 number, 2022: 2,210 1,881 1,268 527 693 1,154 392 2017: 3,477 1,390 1,196 477 592 1,154 377 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: 19 25 16 6 4 14 13 2017: 22 25 27 4 4 23 8 number, 2022: 2,437 3,778 2,225 860 460 2,299 1,874 2017: 2,861 3,799 3,947 542 (D) 3,115 1,041 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 20 17 33 8 4 18 12 2017: 13 28 27 3 - 32 9 number, 2022: 5,123 5,411 9,389 2,449 1,110 6,256 4,001 2017: 3,793 8,120 9,267 1,040 - 10,485 3,078 500 or more .....................................farms, 2022: 41 11 42 6 - 13 12 2017: 37 14 51 4 2 15 17 number, 2022: 120,842 11,657 249,700 7,820 - 12,217 172,729 2017: 118,953 10,425 266,801 5,832 (D) 15,639 164,013 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2022: 907 141 225 33 73 90 112 2017: 881 148 247 32 89 137 126 number, 2022: 62,329 15,224 95,513 7,003 1,776 15,928 40,303 2017: 59,203 14,729 92,872 4,647 1,904 22,369 44,362 : Beef cows .......................................farms, 2022: 877 138 203 33 73 88 101 2017: 836 145 220 32 86 130 121 number, 2022: 18,799 14,211 24,220 7,003 (D) 15,917 11,443 2017: 16,858 13,695 28,245 4,647 1,899 21,589 16,564 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 608 23 60 1 34 15 37 number: 2,266 90 271 (D) 140 52 121 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 129 26 29 - 9 5 20 number: 1,645 339 345 - (D) 68 289 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 83 24 43 11 23 20 11 number: 2,430 743 1,233 332 743 568 265 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 21 23 14 5 3 9 4 number: 1,479 1,538 919 (D) 186 705 337 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 15 21 27 6 3 10 14 number: 2,172 2,853 4,063 777 405 1,536 1,781 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 18 17 21 6 1 20 11 number: 4,757 4,978 6,327 1,811 (D) 5,882 3,400 500 or more .......................................farms: 3 4 9 4 - 9 4 number: 4,050 3,670 11,062 3,715 - 7,106 5,250 : Milk cows .......................................farms, 2022: 52 7 27 - 1 3 17 2017: 70 7 29 - 4 7 9 number, 2022: 43,530 1,013 71,293 - (D) 11 28,860 2017: 42,345 1,034 64,627 - 5 780 27,798 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 26 5 3 - 1 3 11 number: 35 (D) 5 - (D) 11 16 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 1 - - - - - 1 number: (D) - - - - - (D) 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 2 - - - - - 1 number: (D) - - - - - (D) 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ........................................farms: - - 2 - - - - number: - - (D) - - - - 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 2 - 2 - - - - number: (D) - (D) - - - - 500 or more .......................................farms: 21 2 20 - - - 4 number: 42,489 (D) 70,508 - - - 28,800 : Other cattle ......................................farms, 2022: 667 146 222 34 61 86 112 2017: 664 136 224 22 71 120 127 number, 2022: 77,138 8,727 169,384 4,881 1,326 6,505 139,785 2017: 78,145 10,417 190,642 3,487 1,007 8,798 125,624 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 446 61 89 6 28 19 48 number: 1,707 287 357 (D) 85 96 146 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 84 30 29 5 13 13 21 number: 1,045 439 371 62 175 189 303 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 69 26 28 11 13 34 19 number: 1,968 755 905 350 378 981 550 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 17 11 17 6 3 2 6 number: 1,139 702 1,147 436 183 (D) 467 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 13 9 17 - 4 6 4 number: 1,699 1,310 2,193 - 505 741 497 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 13 6 18 2 - 10 5 number: 5,236 2,213 5,364 (D) - 2,638 (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: 25 3 24 4 - 2 9 number: 64,344 3,021 159,047 3,285 - (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2022: 277 161 330 273 309 282 209 252 2017: 331 144 423 291 376 329 221 366 number, 2022: 35,274 17,675 16,043 346,237 25,989 74,255 269,031 3,692 2017: 33,532 13,879 23,111 318,333 26,185 84,789 260,419 5,561 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..........................................farms, 2022: 92 38 184 102 87 110 59 142 2017: 87 36 231 80 102 116 78 212 number, 2022: 388 174 853 440 313 490 246 608 2017: 356 167 995 338 493 520 325 896 10 to 19 ........................................farms, 2022: 21 31 53 38 31 35 42 63 2017: 47 27 64 55 66 54 30 80 number, 2022: 304 380 669 511 463 467 591 788 2017: 633 338 827 738 925 734 416 1,000 20 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 52 35 34 39 68 24 30 25 2017: 73 24 64 39 87 42 29 56 number, 2022: 1,553 1,186 1,142 1,090 2,333 684 931 723 2017: 2,141 776 2,060 1,197 2,776 1,175 892 1,706 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: 42 26 25 16 47 40 18 19 2017: 34 26 30 27 39 24 11 11 number, 2022: 2,873 1,883 1,630 1,120 3,422 2,959 1,374 1,229 2017: 2,528 1,881 2,222 1,898 2,819 1,862 755 775 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: 14 17 15 21 32 16 16 3 2017: 33 16 17 22 39 31 8 4 number, 2022: 1,940 2,258 2,179 3,278 4,411 1,936 1,997 344 2017: 4,724 2,055 2,473 3,522 5,698 4,745 1,041 491 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 38 9 14 16 35 22 5 - 2017: 50 8 8 22 38 31 19 3 number, 2022: 11,460 2,119 3,748 4,861 8,681 5,977 2,115 - 2017: 15,769 1,802 2,265 5,384 10,391 10,103 4,951 693 500 or more .....................................farms, 2022: 18 5 5 41 9 35 39 - 2017: 7 7 9 46 5 31 46 - number, 2022: 16,756 9,675 5,822 334,937 6,366 61,742 261,777 - 2017: 7,381 6,860 12,269 305,256 3,083 65,650 252,039 - : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2022: 235 150 282 241 276 231 169 217 2017: 285 126 329 243 337 263 170 321 number, 2022: 21,141 8,925 10,022 174,992 15,220 30,285 114,219 1,997 2017: 19,093 9,494 13,372 172,259 16,673 30,154 79,268 3,692 : Beef cows .......................................farms, 2022: 207 148 271 210 276 216 145 210 2017: 233 123 323 208 331 244 136 318 number, 2022: 10,827 (D) 9,523 9,787 15,201 15,199 11,176 1,956 2017: 10,050 8,701 (D) 9,393 16,314 17,332 9,230 3,652 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 59 46 170 94 86 107 53 145 number: (D) (D) 654 408 (D) 459 195 552 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 36 21 32 40 41 22 39 41 number: 518 248 405 520 610 349 542 517 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 60 40 32 27 64 27 19 20 number: 1,958 1,114 1,142 781 1,935 913 554 601 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 24 23 15 23 31 22 18 4 number: 1,578 1,736 1,061 1,609 2,419 1,400 1,213 286 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 11 11 10 17 35 20 5 - number: 1,479 1,302 1,491 2,634 4,188 3,397 669 - 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 15 4 8 6 18 13 4 - number: 3,443 1,338 1,820 1,643 5,112 4,271 1,533 - 500 or more .......................................farms: 2 3 4 3 1 5 7 - number: (D) 2,870 2,950 2,192 (D) 4,410 6,470 - : Milk cows .......................................farms, 2022: 44 4 17 37 7 22 27 20 2017: 70 6 12 50 31 37 41 27 number, 2022: 10,314 (D) 499 165,205 19 15,086 103,043 41 2017: 9,043 793 (D) 162,866 359 12,822 70,038 40 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 10 3 13 4 7 7 3 20 number: (D) 10 19 6 19 (D) 11 41 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 1 - 1 - - - - - number: (D) - (D) - - - - - 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 1 - 2 - - 3 - - number: (D) - (D) - - 227 - - 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 10 1 - - - 2 - - number: 1,570 (D) - - - (D) - - 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 17 - 1 8 - 7 4 - number: 5,424 - (D) 3,422 - 2,340 1,400 - 500 or more .......................................farms: 5 - - 25 - 3 20 - number: 3,209 - - 161,777 - 12,150 101,632 - : Other cattle ......................................farms, 2022: 233 129 232 184 245 228 159 165 2017: 250 111 306 214 311 262 175 205 number, 2022: 14,133 8,750 6,021 171,245 10,769 43,970 154,812 1,695 2017: 14,439 4,385 9,739 146,074 9,512 54,635 181,151 1,869 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 106 60 140 70 72 94 61 109 number: 399 231 546 284 (D) 362 270 436 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 30 20 41 26 46 33 19 34 number: 395 284 506 330 654 424 (D) 424 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 40 28 30 23 70 34 25 18 number: 1,219 808 985 740 2,281 1,172 750 540 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 18 11 14 13 30 17 15 3 number: 1,276 745 919 974 1,982 1,023 1,009 (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 20 4 2 14 22 13 2 1 number: 2,554 477 (D) 1,949 2,867 1,716 (D) (D) 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 13 3 3 10 3 23 7 - number: 4,291 705 855 2,777 814 7,028 2,050 - 500 or more .........................................farms: 6 3 2 28 2 14 30 - number: 3,999 5,500 (D) 164,191 (D) 32,245 150,202 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2022: 153 149 61 110 101 191 124 170 2017: 180 180 59 165 180 259 137 184 number, 2022: 4,012 25,991 4,502 64,302 8,125 54,709 9,115 23,256 2017: 5,530 34,968 4,641 76,481 13,738 42,141 13,007 23,388 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..........................................farms, 2022: 76 34 11 18 22 69 50 46 2017: 85 49 8 43 52 83 44 36 number, 2022: (D) 135 57 97 87 292 219 209 2017: 372 220 36 197 253 367 229 188 10 to 19 ........................................farms, 2022: 24 21 5 10 23 39 24 22 2017: 23 15 13 16 35 70 24 27 number, 2022: 320 291 63 121 303 533 320 272 2017: 304 181 184 239 444 941 335 400 20 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 36 23 17 24 21 24 17 42 2017: 43 22 15 26 24 46 23 53 number, 2022: 1,215 683 538 663 (D) 669 541 1,244 2017: 1,222 692 526 826 695 1,352 831 1,582 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: 9 14 11 15 12 25 10 15 2017: 17 18 12 20 29 19 7 20 number, 2022: 698 1,125 811 1,100 753 1,560 680 1,097 2017: 1,117 1,438 754 1,258 2,068 1,313 494 1,486 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: 6 18 13 14 11 19 16 18 2017: 5 17 5 16 19 16 17 23 number, 2022: 673 2,452 1,830 1,697 1,465 2,729 2,352 2,606 2017: 632 2,285 (D) 2,562 2,731 2,220 2,317 3,396 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 2 29 4 10 10 6 4 15 2017: 7 40 4 30 18 16 19 18 number, 2022: (D) 9,301 1,203 2,433 2,892 2,065 1,510 4,586 2017: 1,883 12,544 1,268 8,345 5,124 4,948 5,841 4,626 500 or more .....................................farms, 2022: - 10 - 19 2 9 3 12 2017: - 19 2 14 3 9 3 7 number, 2022: - 12,004 - 58,191 (D) 46,861 3,493 13,242 2017: - 17,608 (D) 63,054 2,423 31,000 2,960 11,710 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2022: 125 131 57 107 87 173 109 153 2017: 150 166 55 137 154 225 114 166 number, 2022: 2,171 18,302 2,373 34,242 4,257 29,034 5,476 14,808 2017: 3,721 22,886 2,752 42,275 6,683 20,738 7,867 15,081 : Beef cows .......................................farms, 2022: 123 130 57 94 85 166 109 152 2017: 144 164 54 124 149 214 111 166 number, 2022: 2,156 18,291 2,373 4,947 (D) 10,408 5,472 (D) 2017: 3,489 22,872 (D) 6,841 6,466 5,622 7,859 15,081 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 64 33 12 24 24 81 47 54 number: (D) 124 (D) 94 (D) 308 (D) 278 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 16 14 11 11 15 24 18 10 number: 218 187 129 138 178 (D) 228 (D) 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 32 19 18 25 26 32 20 32 number: 834 516 595 674 768 871 550 853 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 8 15 10 16 11 10 9 17 number: 434 960 724 1,124 788 760 640 1,158 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 2 16 5 15 3 13 10 22 number: (D) 1,924 629 1,857 430 1,695 1,206 3,095 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 1 26 1 2 6 1 2 8 number: (D) 7,119 (D) (D) 1,790 (D) (D) 2,596 500 or more .......................................farms: - 7 - 1 - 5 3 9 number: - 7,461 - (D) - 6,261 2,120 6,707 : Milk cows .......................................farms, 2022: 8 6 - 15 2 15 4 2 2017: 18 6 1 22 11 21 5 - number, 2022: 15 11 - 29,295 (D) 18,626 4 (D) 2017: 232 14 (D) 35,434 217 15,116 8 - 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 8 6 - - - 5 4 2 number: 15 11 - - - 11 4 (D) 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: - - - - - 3 - - number: - - - - - 270 - - 100 to 199 ........................................farms: - - - - 2 2 - - number: - - - - (D) (D) - - 200 to 499 ........................................farms: - - - 6 - - - - number: - - - 2,420 - - - - 500 or more .......................................farms: - - - 9 - 4 - - number: - - - 26,875 - 18,002 - - : Other cattle ......................................farms, 2022: 121 118 51 98 84 145 97 133 2017: 142 136 47 142 137 190 115 159 number, 2022: 1,841 7,689 2,129 30,060 3,868 25,675 3,639 8,448 2017: 1,809 12,082 1,889 34,206 7,055 21,403 5,140 8,307 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 79 43 13 36 34 73 50 56 number: 308 187 (D) (D) 153 298 168 272 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 19 20 7 20 18 19 12 27 number: (D) 274 87 266 216 (D) (D) 353 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 13 22 17 8 15 27 18 24 number: 349 697 537 235 455 643 504 753 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 8 12 8 12 9 8 10 6 number: 500 848 503 911 670 547 699 402 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 1 10 4 7 5 9 3 11 number: (D) 1,243 526 819 778 1,170 455 1,525 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 1 8 2 1 2 2 3 4 number: (D) 2,205 (D) (D) (D) (D) 703 869 500 or more .........................................farms: - 3 - 14 1 7 1 5 number: - 2,235 - 27,410 (D) 22,050 (D) 4,274 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Cattle and calves ...................................farms, 2022: 257 252 76 16 76 562 56 214 2017: 320 293 90 27 94 559 70 221 number, 2022: 190,536 74,969 31,014 161 6,471 253,687 8,486 29,081 2017: 157,193 57,364 27,520 260 6,842 199,003 7,162 31,305 Farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..........................................farms, 2022: 62 123 19 13 23 213 7 65 2017: 79 125 21 16 14 164 8 76 number, 2022: 302 602 118 74 121 933 34 291 2017: 327 541 73 62 41 786 35 380 10 to 19 ........................................farms, 2022: 39 42 6 1 7 102 8 26 2017: 34 75 13 8 13 87 11 22 number, 2022: 500 587 87 (D) 87 1,331 98 353 2017: 450 980 165 120 210 1,105 142 301 20 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 45 45 14 2 14 86 18 36 2017: 59 35 12 3 28 94 25 42 number, 2022: 1,431 1,233 445 (D) 367 2,812 593 1,129 2017: 1,781 1,104 386 78 854 3,176 713 1,293 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: 22 14 13 - 6 43 7 25 2017: 30 22 12 - 23 79 15 12 number, 2022: 1,740 945 871 - 330 2,989 551 1,719 2017: 2,230 1,621 844 - 1,564 5,673 880 970 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: 16 7 14 - 9 38 7 18 2017: 31 11 12 - 6 44 4 24 number, 2022: 2,563 862 2,031 - 1,075 5,175 1,089 2,567 2017: 4,527 1,278 1,583 - (D) 6,030 (D) 3,680 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 27 8 4 - 17 29 6 26 2017: 36 7 13 - 9 33 5 27 number, 2022: 8,843 2,347 1,134 - 4,491 8,917 1,671 7,614 2017: 10,827 2,310 3,233 - 2,822 9,909 1,465 7,941 500 or more .....................................farms, 2022: 46 13 6 - - 51 3 18 2017: 51 18 7 - 1 58 2 18 number, 2022: 175,157 68,393 26,328 - - 231,530 4,450 15,408 2017: 137,051 49,530 21,236 - (D) 172,324 (D) 16,740 : Cows and heifers that calved ......................farms, 2022: 230 203 66 16 74 478 46 183 2017: 270 244 77 26 94 498 59 194 number, 2022: 64,184 24,748 8,219 102 3,913 132,625 3,106 15,032 2017: 69,089 24,423 6,825 144 4,579 117,195 2,028 16,141 : Beef cows .......................................farms, 2022: 224 194 64 16 73 440 46 182 2017: 252 232 76 23 92 452 58 193 number, 2022: 39,666 8,652 (D) 90 3,897 24,246 3,106 15,022 2017: 44,443 10,213 (D) 135 4,287 27,319 (D) 16,129 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 73 113 15 13 23 212 9 55 number: 324 459 74 50 (D) 958 42 201 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: 27 24 7 3 15 71 7 23 number: 373 (D) 104 40 199 972 80 325 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: 35 34 17 - 7 69 16 39 number: 969 989 593 - 219 2,123 444 1,214 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: 24 12 9 - 11 41 4 23 number: 1,814 790 665 - 694 2,866 295 1,721 100 to 199 ........................................farms: 13 2 11 - 15 26 7 21 number: 1,903 (D) 1,521 - 2,245 3,717 1,015 3,233 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 29 6 3 - 2 10 2 15 number: 9,140 1,605 955 - (D) 3,265 (D) 4,397 500 or more .......................................farms: 23 3 2 - - 11 1 6 number: 25,143 4,185 (D) - - 10,345 (D) 3,931 : Milk cows .......................................farms, 2022: 11 14 2 3 6 58 - 6 2017: 23 27 1 3 12 59 1 10 number, 2022: 24,518 16,096 (D) 12 16 108,379 - 10 2017: 24,646 14,210 (D) 9 292 89,876 (D) 12 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ............................................farms: 3 8 - 3 6 21 - 6 number: 6 24 - 12 16 44 - 10 10 to 19 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ..........................................farms: - - - - - 2 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - 50 to 99 ..........................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - 100 to 199 ........................................farms: - - - - - 2 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - 200 to 499 ........................................farms: 4 - 1 - - 2 - - number: 1,612 - (D) - - (D) - - 500 or more .......................................farms: 4 6 1 - - 30 - - number: 22,900 16,072 (D) - - 107,482 - - : Other cattle ......................................farms, 2022: 220 180 69 9 61 435 45 186 2017: 268 205 71 20 69 446 42 178 number, 2022: 126,352 50,221 22,795 59 2,558 121,062 5,380 14,049 2017: 88,104 32,941 20,695 116 2,263 81,808 5,134 15,164 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 93 105 33 7 25 222 10 77 number: 412 451 159 (D) 91 879 68 349 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 20 20 7 - 6 59 5 25 number: 260 256 112 - (D) 761 (D) 334 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 30 24 19 2 11 54 18 30 number: 936 633 568 (D) 310 1,480 640 905 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 23 12 5 - 6 29 5 17 number: 1,634 701 332 - 382 1,880 322 1,077 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 14 7 1 - 12 17 3 14 number: 2,065 898 (D) - 1,456 2,238 400 1,865 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 15 4 - - 1 18 1 16 number: 4,632 896 - - (D) 5,659 (D) 4,760 500 or more .........................................farms: 25 8 4 - - 36 3 7 number: 116,413 46,386 (D) - - 108,165 3,700 4,759 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed ....................................farms, 2022: 122 3 2 - 3 - 4 2017: 111 6 1 5 2 1 5 number, 2022: 336,862 (D) (D) - 296 - (D) 2017: 267,766 1,054 (D) 480 (D) (D) 4,110 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: 16 - 1 - - - 1 number: 213 - (D) - - - (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 19 - - - - - 1 number: 583 - - - - - (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 20 1 - - 1 - - number: 1,207 (D) - - (D) - - 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 9 - 1 - 2 - - number: 1,304 - (D) - (D) - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 28 1 - - - - 1 number: 8,963 (D) - - - - (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: 30 1 - - - - 1 number: 324,592 (D) - - - - (D) : SALES : : Milk sold from cows .................................farms, 2022: 330 10 - 4 9 - 17 2017: 491 15 - 7 23 - 23 $1,000, 2022: 3,727,378 113,396 - (D) 2,197 - 28,757 2017: 2,330,865 61,489 - 2,909 3,830 - 22,831 : Cattle and calves sold ..............................farms, 2022: 7,630 364 87 287 168 41 454 2017: 8,757 421 98 291 222 52 535 number, 2022: 1,835,062 38,011 12,032 11,201 13,514 372 56,394 2017: 1,870,607 40,485 10,235 13,324 15,724 491 65,126 $1,000, 2022: 2,175,548 33,162 12,668 11,683 13,697 374 62,992 2017: 1,787,255 25,442 9,234 12,812 14,365 (D) 72,379 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ................................................farms: 3,400 280 24 162 39 28 182 number: 13,020 1,008 98 592 159 87 732 10 to 19 ..............................................farms: 972 39 5 27 24 7 69 number: 12,896 523 72 370 292 88 928 20 to 49 ..............................................farms: 1,150 17 16 45 44 6 78 number: 35,997 449 519 1,285 1,508 197 2,375 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 710 8 10 22 26 - 40 number: 49,144 529 808 1,574 1,810 - 2,664 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 547 4 17 15 18 - 28 number: 75,382 591 2,368 (D) 2,579 - 4,322 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 464 5 8 14 14 - 37 number: 141,633 1,295 2,326 3,890 4,427 - 11,669 500 or more ...........................................farms: 387 11 7 2 3 - 20 number: 1,506,990 33,616 5,841 (D) 2,739 - 33,704 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold .............................................farms, 2022: 2,533 80 22 75 62 12 137 2017: 2,758 100 30 69 63 11 166 number, 2022: 485,342 21,026 364 1,846 2,187 56 6,854 2017: 533,095 27,275 639 1,121 2,936 76 6,568 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 1,263 59 8 42 27 11 68 number: 4,504 158 (D) 123 122 (D) 280 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 359 6 8 12 9 - 19 number: 4,651 65 122 151 (D) - 231 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 408 3 5 11 18 1 23 number: 12,148 90 155 285 480 (D) 699 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 173 3 1 6 2 - 11 number: 11,686 184 (D) 394 (D) - 717 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 110 2 - 2 3 - 9 number: 15,287 (D) - (D) 430 - 1,123 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 101 2 - 2 3 - 3 number: 29,850 (D) - (D) 890 - 943 500 or more .........................................farms: 119 5 - - - - 4 number: 407,216 19,676 - - - - 2,861 : Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more, : sold ............................................ farms, 2022: 7,198 347 87 257 163 38 440 2017: 8,170 395 94 266 216 49 487 number, 2022: 1,349,720 16,985 11,668 9,355 11,327 316 49,540 2017: 1,337,512 13,210 9,596 12,203 12,788 415 58,558 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 3,396 272 25 147 42 28 194 number: 12,693 961 97 537 (D) 85 777 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 887 38 5 28 25 5 66 number: 11,925 531 72 (D) 312 68 873 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 1,046 14 16 31 43 5 66 number: 32,169 369 512 908 1,399 163 1,978 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 671 6 11 23 21 - 35 number: 46,178 324 868 1,625 1,398 - 2,135 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 464 3 16 17 19 - 27 number: 63,872 502 2,280 2,439 2,878 - 4,183 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 435 6 7 10 11 - 37 number: 128,005 1,756 2,009 2,884 3,169 - 11,078 500 or more .........................................farms: 299 8 7 1 2 - 15 number: 1,054,878 12,542 5,830 (D) (D) - 28,516 : Cattle on feed sold ...............................farms, 2022: 228 5 3 4 3 1 13 2017: 227 9 1 14 5 1 10 number, 2022: 492,887 2,246 64 265 246 (D) (D) 2017: 454,640 610 (D) 1,082 182 (D) 11,967 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: 51 1 2 2 - 1 5 number: 738 (D) (D) (D) - (D) 71 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed ....................................farms, 2022: - 5 1 4 - 1 2 2017: 1 - - 7 2 1 - number, 2022: - 63 (D) (D) - (D) (D) 2017: (D) - - (D) (D) (D) - 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: - 5 1 - - - 1 number: - 63 (D) - - - (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 50 to 99 ............................................farms: - - - 1 - - 1 number: - - - (D) - - (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - - - 2 - 1 - number: - - - (D) - (D) - 500 or more .........................................farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - : SALES : : Milk sold from cows .................................farms, 2022: - - 7 4 2 - - 2017: - - 6 4 2 1 - $1,000, 2022: - - 552 2,618 (D) - - 2017: - - 192 1,284 (D) (D) - : Cattle and calves sold ..............................farms, 2022: 66 50 167 219 92 57 27 2017: 55 37 151 265 103 61 33 number, 2022: 13,433 2,489 1,677 53,553 2,655 6,440 4,470 2017: 8,009 1,178 2,366 43,121 2,867 6,031 3,911 $1,000, 2022: 15,101 2,293 1,816 70,800 (D) (D) (D) 2017: 6,977 994 2,201 54,218 2,659 5,327 4,194 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ................................................farms: 8 28 126 98 39 15 8 number: 18 80 423 361 144 78 (D) 10 to 19 ..............................................farms: 14 4 13 13 20 9 1 number: 157 (D) (D) 176 252 139 (D) 20 to 49 ..............................................farms: 8 7 26 43 22 8 8 number: 279 170 664 1,278 669 330 223 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 7 2 - 29 5 11 6 number: 594 (D) - 2,117 338 858 462 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 8 6 - 13 3 7 2 number: 995 940 - 1,846 508 (D) (D) 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 10 3 2 14 3 5 - number: 2,863 1,123 (D) 3,722 744 1,965 - 500 or more ...........................................farms: 11 - - 9 - 2 2 number: 8,527 - - 44,053 - (D) (D) : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold .............................................farms, 2022: 18 23 44 60 40 24 6 2017: 27 15 35 66 37 24 9 number, 2022: 1,617 380 223 1,391 278 472 564 2017: 2,072 308 467 1,359 382 1,448 495 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 5 12 36 31 30 10 1 number: 17 (D) 97 164 122 (D) (D) 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 2 5 6 13 10 5 2 number: (D) 63 (D) 178 156 66 (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 4 4 2 12 - 8 - number: 150 133 (D) 425 - 244 - 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 2 2 - 1 - - 2 number: (D) (D) - (D) - - (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 3 - - 2 - 1 - number: 380 - - (D) - (D) - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 1 - - 1 - - 1 number: (D) - - (D) - - (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: 1 - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - : Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more, : sold ............................................ farms, 2022: 63 50 154 212 87 54 27 2017: 46 31 143 243 102 59 32 number, 2022: 11,816 2,109 1,454 52,162 2,377 5,968 3,906 2017: 5,937 870 1,899 41,762 2,485 4,583 3,416 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 11 30 122 99 44 16 8 number: 28 (D) 403 347 148 (D) 34 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 12 7 10 23 17 6 3 number: 137 80 (D) 277 248 91 (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 8 2 20 33 15 9 6 number: 270 (D) 496 1,014 421 278 (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 7 4 - 23 5 10 8 number: 588 250 - 1,663 338 769 586 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 6 4 - 14 3 6 - number: 776 637 - 1,982 478 709 - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 9 3 2 11 3 5 - number: 2,429 1,014 (D) 3,112 744 1,964 - 500 or more .........................................farms: 10 - - 9 - 2 2 number: 7,588 - - 43,767 - (D) (D) : Cattle on feed sold ...............................farms, 2022: 2 - 1 7 6 1 1 2017: 2 - 3 13 8 1 - number, 2022: (D) - (D) (D) 102 (D) (D) 2017: (D) - 68 (D) 172 (D) - 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: - - - 1 6 - 1 number: - - - (D) 102 - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed ....................................farms, 2022: 8 2 12 - - 2 2 2017: 6 4 12 - - - 1 number, 2022: 1,568 (D) 74,703 - - (D) (D) 2017: 3,463 339 84,762 - - - (D) 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: - - 1 - - - - number: - - (D) - - - - 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 2 - 1 - - 2 - number: (D) - (D) - - (D) - 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 1 1 - - - - - number: (D) (D) - - - - - 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 1 1 1 - - - - number: (D) (D) (D) - - - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 4 - - - - - 1 number: 1,355 - - - - - (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: - - 9 - - - 1 number: - - 74,499 - - - (D) : SALES : : Milk sold from cows .................................farms, 2022: 28 2 25 - - - 6 2017: 48 5 28 - 1 7 6 $1,000, 2022: 279,233 (D) 393,469 - - - (D) 2017: 180,029 3,856 234,085 - (D) 2,298 103,608 : Cattle and calves sold ..............................farms, 2022: 784 163 223 34 69 92 101 2017: 813 157 243 32 80 133 131 number, 2022: 85,837 22,045 248,496 7,273 1,398 14,487 180,556 2017: 76,042 32,155 315,901 5,831 1,642 21,016 146,164 $1,000, 2022: 82,217 20,844 330,430 8,314 (D) 16,836 (D) 2017: 66,024 26,877 401,873 (D) (D) 23,463 (D) 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ................................................farms: 529 40 51 2 38 20 33 number: 1,919 155 200 (D) 185 68 149 10 to 19 ..............................................farms: 93 18 28 - 9 8 16 number: 1,186 260 372 - 128 103 192 20 to 49 ..............................................farms: 73 27 39 5 16 8 12 number: 2,231 830 1,246 147 524 235 383 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 23 23 28 8 3 16 11 number: 1,429 1,396 1,987 (D) 191 1,152 837 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 23 22 22 10 3 14 10 number: 2,800 3,050 2,998 1,577 370 1,983 1,342 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 14 24 26 5 - 19 9 number: 5,075 7,284 8,092 1,770 - 5,547 2,824 500 or more ...........................................farms: 29 9 29 4 - 7 10 number: 71,197 9,070 233,601 3,223 - 5,399 174,829 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold .............................................farms, 2022: 258 55 98 15 24 28 36 2017: 222 39 101 12 30 43 40 number, 2022: 20,394 3,245 51,165 858 164 1,676 9,314 2017: 20,918 3,202 58,033 1,343 321 1,519 8,876 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 190 17 21 2 18 5 22 number: 577 76 74 (D) 78 12 103 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 17 20 13 2 5 1 3 number: 232 264 154 (D) (D) (D) 38 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 23 8 25 4 1 13 2 number: 711 209 679 151 (D) 422 (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 4 5 6 5 - 5 1 number: 312 348 415 399 - 333 (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 5 2 11 2 - 2 - number: 688 (D) 1,580 (D) - (D) - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 8 2 11 - - 2 4 number: 2,767 (D) 2,896 - - (D) 1,145 500 or more .........................................farms: 11 1 11 - - - 4 number: 15,107 (D) 45,367 - - - 7,900 : Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more, : sold ............................................ farms, 2022: 724 152 208 34 68 91 97 2017: 750 154 228 28 73 131 122 number, 2022: 65,443 18,800 197,331 6,415 1,234 12,811 171,242 2017: 55,124 28,953 257,868 4,488 1,321 19,497 137,288 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 508 39 51 2 42 22 39 number: 1,756 158 200 (D) 200 80 178 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 74 17 30 3 6 7 11 number: 931 244 413 (D) (D) 84 142 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 61 24 43 5 15 18 10 number: 1,796 725 1,367 174 474 486 313 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 29 21 20 10 2 11 9 number: 1,900 1,241 1,419 732 (D) 801 701 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 13 19 18 5 3 10 12 number: 1,504 2,537 2,484 857 350 1,512 (D) 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 20 24 21 5 - 16 7 number: 6,861 6,975 5,577 1,490 - 4,503 2,042 500 or more .........................................farms: 19 8 25 4 - 7 9 number: 50,695 6,920 185,871 3,093 - 5,345 (D) : Cattle on feed sold ...............................farms, 2022: 14 4 13 - - 3 4 2017: 13 7 16 1 3 1 2 number, 2022: 2,571 156 122,344 - - (D) (D) 2017: 4,007 432 195,459 (D) 125 (D) (D) 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: 3 1 1 - - - - number: 42 (D) (D) - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed ....................................farms, 2022: 7 - 3 3 3 10 8 1 2017: 5 3 - 1 5 8 3 - number, 2022: 745 - (D) (D) 141 11,917 18,190 (D) 2017: 387 172 - (D) 174 (D) 10,000 - 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: - - 2 2 - - - - number: - - (D) (D) - - - - 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 1 - - - 1 - - - number: (D) - - - (D) - - - 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 4 - - - 2 - 1 1 number: 275 - - - (D) - (D) (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - 2 - number: - - - - - - (D) - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 2 - - 1 - 9 - - number: (D) - - (D) - (D) - - 500 or more .........................................farms: - - 1 - - 1 5 - number: - - (D) - - (D) 17,790 - : SALES : : Milk sold from cows .................................farms, 2022: 36 1 4 36 2 15 25 5 2017: 56 3 6 43 5 20 39 2 $1,000, 2022: 62,449 (D) 2,582 824,839 (D) 84,937 519,029 (D) 2017: 35,114 3,194 (D) 620,327 (D) 49,776 274,290 (D) : Cattle and calves sold ..............................farms, 2022: 235 165 263 216 253 259 205 186 2017: 313 158 327 280 321 287 197 227 number, 2022: 16,495 15,581 9,614 177,712 14,177 50,323 200,234 2,016 2017: 14,374 13,833 12,884 121,829 14,985 55,311 308,434 2,597 $1,000, 2022: (D) 16,421 11,398 145,387 (D) 74,534 220,436 2,262 2017: 11,372 14,780 10,824 70,150 14,249 69,719 242,741 2,429 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ................................................farms: 60 63 151 86 59 127 91 128 number: 274 271 477 379 218 485 395 433 10 to 19 ..............................................farms: 42 9 37 21 44 14 20 34 number: 602 118 477 287 593 165 276 (D) 20 to 49 ..............................................farms: 46 44 29 19 60 38 21 13 number: 1,458 1,499 1,038 560 1,870 1,200 660 385 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 35 20 22 22 50 16 19 9 number: 2,304 1,424 1,473 1,501 3,496 1,089 1,304 564 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 28 16 14 17 27 22 6 2 number: 3,934 2,226 2,146 2,198 3,660 2,775 820 (D) 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 20 9 7 17 12 18 16 - number: 5,460 2,327 1,715 5,124 (D) 5,455 5,323 - 500 or more ...........................................farms: 4 4 3 34 1 24 32 - number: 2,463 7,716 2,288 167,663 (D) 39,154 191,456 - : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold .............................................farms, 2022: 89 56 79 86 69 82 70 51 2017: 132 53 107 135 106 55 83 77 number, 2022: 4,608 1,225 1,176 73,139 1,324 5,913 81,630 508 2017: 3,741 1,164 3,239 69,597 1,313 2,487 107,604 721 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 23 27 51 24 30 32 24 34 number: 105 103 166 90 (D) 110 (D) 116 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 13 7 8 11 17 5 13 8 number: 173 (D) (D) 132 211 60 189 (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 24 13 14 14 14 17 5 8 number: 788 334 442 447 407 572 150 242 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 15 8 5 - 7 12 1 1 number: 1,016 590 338 - 426 718 (D) (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 10 1 1 9 1 9 5 - number: 1,385 (D) (D) 1,222 (D) 1,607 756 - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 4 - - 10 - 4 4 - number: 1,141 - - 3,408 - 1,232 1,190 - 500 or more .........................................farms: - - - 18 - 3 18 - number: - - - 67,840 - 1,614 79,189 - : Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more, : sold ............................................ farms, 2022: 228 160 245 198 246 245 188 177 2017: 287 155 301 241 301 279 184 211 number, 2022: 11,887 14,356 8,438 104,573 12,853 44,410 118,604 1,508 2017: 10,633 12,669 9,645 52,232 13,672 52,824 200,830 1,876 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 64 62 141 81 69 119 86 137 number: (D) 227 425 350 (D) 406 369 482 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 42 18 39 13 42 14 17 21 number: 621 263 519 190 551 164 213 (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 49 36 28 24 56 36 20 14 number: 1,551 1,067 1,035 773 1,700 1,139 649 418 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 36 18 18 16 43 28 17 4 number: 2,324 1,247 1,141 1,099 3,043 1,872 1,124 258 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 25 13 10 19 23 9 6 1 number: 3,423 1,514 1,560 2,572 3,002 1,166 810 (D) 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 10 9 6 19 12 26 21 - number: 2,480 2,327 1,470 5,200 3,551 7,830 6,416 - 500 or more .........................................farms: 2 4 3 26 1 13 21 - number: (D) 7,711 2,288 94,389 (D) 31,833 109,023 - : Cattle on feed sold ...............................farms, 2022: 17 5 4 5 9 14 9 4 2017: 15 3 1 5 13 4 3 1 number, 2022: 1,184 135 918 326 935 23,066 29,854 137 2017: 581 156 (D) 470 1,778 (D) 24,454 (D) 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: 2 3 - 2 2 - - 2 number: (D) (D) - (D) (D) - - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed ....................................farms, 2022: - 1 - 1 - 1 3 3 2017: 3 1 - 2 7 - - - number, 2022: - (D) - (D) - (D) 265 75 2017: 44 (D) - (D) 617 - - - 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 20 to 49 ............................................farms: - 1 - - - - 1 3 number: - (D) - - - - (D) 75 50 to 99 ............................................farms: - - - - - - 1 - number: - - - - - - (D) - 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - 1 - number: - - - - - - (D) - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 500 or more .........................................farms: - - - 1 - 1 - - number: - - - (D) - (D) - - : SALES : : Milk sold from cows .................................farms, 2022: 4 - - 15 2 10 - 1 2017: 5 2 - 16 3 15 2 - $1,000, 2022: 17 - - 186,004 (D) 98,910 - (D) 2017: 804 (D) - 129,568 641 63,570 (D) - : Cattle and calves sold ..............................farms, 2022: 112 141 59 117 93 185 118 143 2017: 147 171 54 147 148 236 146 186 number, 2022: 1,683 18,749 2,704 39,040 4,266 21,619 4,864 14,305 2017: 2,888 22,947 3,512 42,203 8,952 19,962 12,581 14,108 $1,000, 2022: 1,776 22,989 (D) 33,028 (D) 20,739 (D) 14,573 2017: 2,451 25,112 (D) 30,391 9,267 12,809 12,963 12,291 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ................................................farms: 65 26 19 33 31 75 65 51 number: 253 122 87 111 109 323 257 222 10 to 19 ..............................................farms: 21 19 6 18 24 46 14 12 number: (D) 258 93 223 315 654 170 150 20 to 49 ..............................................farms: 21 29 18 13 14 17 16 26 number: 656 888 624 375 447 428 455 850 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 3 18 5 18 13 15 10 20 number: (D) 1,234 354 1,183 942 1,077 686 1,424 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 2 19 10 14 4 17 9 16 number: (D) 2,617 (D) 2,086 502 2,249 (D) 2,102 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - 22 1 8 7 6 2 12 number: - 5,874 (D) 2,092 1,951 1,840 (D) 4,333 500 or more ...........................................farms: - 8 - 13 - 9 2 6 number: - 7,756 - 32,970 - 15,048 (D) 5,224 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold .............................................farms, 2022: 38 47 16 51 25 72 43 40 2017: 50 41 18 47 38 70 47 77 number, 2022: 242 1,274 139 21,238 395 7,651 839 2,375 2017: 720 1,068 530 21,896 1,032 7,204 1,094 3,414 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 31 24 11 15 15 34 21 13 number: (D) 86 44 (D) 66 (D) (D) 63 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 2 3 3 7 3 12 7 7 number: (D) (D) (D) 85 (D) 152 96 97 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 5 12 2 7 5 8 10 9 number: 120 370 (D) 186 157 170 244 308 50 to 99 ............................................farms: - 6 - 6 2 11 4 3 number: - 381 - 442 (D) 731 243 263 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - - 7 - 2 - 4 number: - - - 875 - (D) - 520 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - 2 - 2 - - 1 4 number: - (D) - (D) - - (D) 1,124 500 or more .........................................farms: - - - 7 - 5 - - number: - - - 19,105 - 6,204 - - : Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more, : sold ............................................ farms, 2022: 106 136 57 111 87 175 108 141 2017: 134 163 51 139 143 215 131 167 number, 2022: 1,441 17,475 2,565 17,802 3,871 13,968 4,025 11,930 2017: 2,168 21,879 2,982 20,307 7,920 12,758 11,487 10,694 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 66 28 19 34 31 96 63 53 number: 230 128 (D) 99 (D) 414 258 212 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 19 21 7 16 18 26 18 12 number: 246 296 105 184 237 393 210 153 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 18 26 15 19 17 10 6 25 number: 593 789 510 602 553 289 (D) 739 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 1 19 6 12 12 22 12 20 number: (D) 1,368 437 860 929 1,460 818 1,398 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 2 14 9 16 2 8 6 19 number: (D) 1,982 1,220 1,922 (D) 1,133 832 2,585 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - 20 1 6 7 7 1 6 number: - 5,215 (D) 1,854 1,809 2,026 (D) 2,125 500 or more .........................................farms: - 8 - 8 - 6 2 6 number: - 7,697 - 12,281 - 8,253 (D) 4,718 : Cattle on feed sold ...............................farms, 2022: 2 4 3 1 2 1 3 5 2017: 3 4 2 1 11 1 2 1 number, 2022: (D) 161 428 (D) (D) (D) 325 249 2017: 64 890 (D) (D) 1,610 (D) (D) (D) 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: - 2 - - 2 - - 2 number: - (D) - - (D) - - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY - Con. : : Cattle and calves - Con. : : Cattle on feed ....................................farms, 2022: 9 2 4 - 2 4 - 6 2017: 10 2 3 - - 3 - 1 number, 2022: 40,570 (D) (D) - (D) 1,461 - 703 2017: (D) (D) (D) - - 248 - (D) 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: 1 - - - - - - 1 number: (D) - - - - - - (D) 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 2 1 - - - 1 - 2 number: (D) (D) - - - (D) - (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 1 - 1 - 2 - - 1 number: (D) - (D) - (D) - - (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 2 - - - - 2 - 2 number: (D) - - - - (D) - (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: 3 1 3 - - 1 - - number: (D) (D) (D) - - (D) - - : SALES : : Milk sold from cows .................................farms, 2022: 8 9 2 - 3 37 - 1 2017: 17 17 1 3 8 51 1 - $1,000, 2022: 143,564 102,906 (D) - 14 675,603 - (D) 2017: 94,081 53,508 (D) 12 870 372,868 (D) - : Cattle and calves sold ..............................farms, 2022: 235 230 72 6 75 461 54 202 2017: 291 265 74 13 91 515 82 168 number, 2022: 194,998 73,333 21,204 53 4,348 143,782 10,559 17,070 2017: 187,046 45,245 16,686 94 3,505 92,588 8,311 34,113 $1,000, 2022: 216,594 126,680 39,976 61 (D) 130,219 10,261 20,358 2017: 115,729 60,688 20,867 88 3,177 64,955 (D) 27,333 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ................................................farms: 66 128 17 3 30 203 11 62 number: 282 524 59 12 108 849 40 224 10 to 19 ..............................................farms: 39 44 10 3 7 49 3 19 number: 533 (D) (D) 41 (D) 632 40 275 20 to 49 ..............................................farms: 33 25 18 - 11 70 16 45 number: 1,132 723 593 - 307 2,242 561 1,504 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 19 12 8 - 13 46 10 29 number: 1,291 780 540 - 875 3,330 713 1,948 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 17 2 12 - 12 32 6 18 number: 2,440 (D) 1,410 - 1,612 4,227 805 2,533 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 31 10 3 - - 23 4 24 number: 10,556 3,145 1,076 - - 7,902 1,000 7,034 500 or more ...........................................farms: 30 9 4 - 2 38 4 5 number: 178,764 67,366 (D) - (D) 124,600 7,400 3,552 : Calves weighing less than 500 pounds, : sold .............................................farms, 2022: 90 85 21 - 25 190 16 75 2017: 84 94 23 3 36 162 24 57 number, 2022: 97,261 4,189 345 - 314 52,873 1,284 1,326 2017: 118,050 4,236 1,281 4 400 40,773 798 1,371 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 21 56 13 - 17 91 3 38 number: (D) 203 (D) - 48 296 13 132 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 22 13 2 - 2 26 1 9 number: 290 157 (D) - (D) 329 (D) 120 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 14 4 3 - 5 19 8 21 number: 466 (D) 90 - 148 489 201 622 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 2 3 3 - 1 18 2 7 number: (D) 253 170 - (D) 1,189 (D) 452 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 9 3 - - - 5 - - number: 1,190 351 - - - 632 - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 10 4 - - - 15 1 - number: 2,679 1,154 - - - 4,416 (D) - 500 or more .........................................farms: 12 2 - - - 16 1 - number: 92,399 (D) - - - 45,522 (D) - : Cattle weighing 500 pounds or more, : sold ............................................ farms, 2022: 221 212 70 6 64 424 52 188 2017: 281 249 71 13 85 486 72 162 number, 2022: 97,737 69,144 20,859 53 4,034 90,909 9,275 15,744 2017: 68,996 41,009 15,405 90 3,105 51,815 7,513 32,742 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 9 ..............................................farms: 67 134 17 3 21 197 10 57 number: 277 548 (D) 12 87 830 (D) 199 10 to 19 ............................................farms: 33 30 9 3 7 47 2 20 number: 451 416 125 41 116 675 (D) 294 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 36 19 18 - 10 58 17 45 number: 1,121 555 582 - 287 1,732 507 1,428 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 20 11 10 - 17 40 11 23 number: 1,466 762 641 - 1,210 2,810 740 1,618 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 20 4 9 - 7 27 5 15 number: 2,832 577 1,050 - (D) 3,570 761 2,038 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 25 5 3 - - 28 3 23 number: 8,697 1,432 1,028 - - 8,735 750 6,615 500 or more .........................................farms: 20 9 4 - 2 27 4 5 number: 82,893 64,854 (D) - (D) 72,557 6,450 3,552 : Cattle on feed sold ...............................farms, 2022: 14 6 4 - 4 11 8 8 2017: 21 8 3 - - 14 - 1 number, 2022: (D) (D) (D) - 264 2,560 594 425 2017: 34,244 (D) (D) - - 471 - (D) 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 19 .............................................farms: 3 2 - - 2 - 1 2 number: 48 (D) - - (D) - (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle on feed sold - Con. : 2022 farms by number sold: - Con. : : 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 53 1 1 1 - - 5 number: 1,621 (D) (D) (D) - - 145 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 32 - - - 3 - 1 number: 2,096 - - - 246 - (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 32 1 - - - - - number: 4,183 (D) - - - - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 25 1 - 1 - - 1 number: 7,050 (D) - (D) - - (D) 500 or more .........................................farms: 35 1 - - - - 1 number: 477,199 (D) - - - - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle on feed sold - Con. : 2022 farms by number sold: - Con. : : 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 1 - 1 1 - - - number: (D) - (D) (D) - - - 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 1 - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - - 2 - 1 - number: - - - (D) - (D) - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - - - 2 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 500 or more .........................................farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle on feed sold - Con. : 2022 farms by number sold: - Con. : : 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 2 2 - - - 2 1 number: (D) (D) - - - (D) (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 2 1 1 - - - 1 number: (D) (D) (D) - - - (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 3 - 1 - - - - number: 345 - (D) - - - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 3 - - - - - - number: 730 - - - - - - 500 or more .........................................farms: 1 - 10 - - 1 2 number: (D) - 122,087 - - (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle on feed sold - Con. : 2022 farms by number sold: - Con. : : 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 5 2 3 1 1 1 2 - number: (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) - 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 4 - - 1 2 2 2 2 number: 240 - - (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: 6 - - - 2 1 - - number: 808 - - - (D) (D) - - 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - - - 1 2 7 1 - number: - - - (D) (D) (D) (D) - 500 or more .........................................farms: - - 1 - - 3 4 - number: - - (D) - - (D) 29,461 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle on feed sold - Con. : 2022 farms by number sold: - Con. : : 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 2 - - - - - - 1 number: (D) - - - - - - (D) 50 to 99 ............................................farms: - 2 - - - - 1 - number: - (D) - - - - (D) - 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - 3 - - - 2 2 number: - - 428 - - - (D) (D) 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 500 or more .........................................farms: - - - 1 - 1 - - number: - - - (D) - (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 11. Cattle and Calves - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SALES - Con. : : Cattle and calves sold - Con. : Cattle on feed sold - Con. : 2022 farms by number sold: - Con. : : 20 to 49 ............................................farms: 2 3 1 - - 5 3 3 number: (D) 67 (D) - - 165 (D) 93 50 to 99 ............................................farms: 2 - - - - 2 - 2 number: (D) - - - - (D) - (D) 100 to 199 ..........................................farms: - - - - 2 1 4 1 number: - - - - (D) (D) 500 (D) 200 to 499 ..........................................farms: 4 - - - - 2 - - number: 1,411 - - - - (D) - - 500 or more .........................................farms: 3 1 3 - - 1 - - number: (D) (D) (D) - - (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 562 30 2 32 4 2 19 2017: 606 21 1 14 9 6 21 number, 2022: 21,157 (D) (D) 372 8 (D) 572 2017: 35,634 2,106 (D) 48 65 40 227 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2022: 517 26 2 28 4 2 14 2017: 562 17 1 14 9 6 17 number, 2022: 3,214 118 (D) (D) 8 (D) (D) 2017: 3,055 44 (D) 48 65 40 127 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 20 2 - 3 - - 2 2017: 26 - - - - - 4 number, 2022: 649 (D) - 90 - - (D) 2017: (D) - - - - - 100 : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: 5 - - - - - - 2017: 8 1 - - - - - number, 2022: (D) - - - - - - 2017: 604 (D) - - - - - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: 6 - - - - - 3 2017: 1 1 - - - - - number, 2022: 960 - - - - - 384 2017: (D) (D) - - - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 9 1 - 1 - - - 2017: 4 1 - - - - - number, 2022: 1,884 (D) - (D) - - - 2017: 1,000 (D) - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2022: 2 - - - - - - 2017: 1 - - - - - - number, 2022: (D) - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2022: 3 1 - - - - - 2017: 4 1 - - - - - number, 2022: 12,994 (D) - - - - - 2017: 29,435 (D) - - - - - : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2022: 663 30 - 24 4 7 27 2017: 699 21 2 23 10 7 35 number, 2022: 100,260 3,058 - 341 9 47 1,539 2017: 105,161 (D) (D) 63 15 53 406 $1,000, 2022: 23,779 (D) - (D) 2 13 267 2017: 18,100 (D) (D) 13 3 11 (D) : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 576 23 - 22 4 6 22 number: 3,409 64 - (D) 9 (D) 155 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: 37 5 - 1 - 1 - number: 1,205 (D) - (D) - (D) - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 18 - - - - - - number: 1,290 - - - - - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: 10 - - - - - 3 number: (D) - - - - - (D) : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 15 1 - 1 - - - number: 4,677 (D) - (D) - - - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: 2 - - - - - 2 number: (D) - - - - - (D) 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 5 1 - - - - - number: 87,485 (D) - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 2 - 53 32 6 2 4 2017: 1 - 66 28 29 4 1 number, 2022: (D) - 344 303 63 (D) 32 2017: (D) - 293 252 177 108 (D) : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2022: 2 - 53 28 6 - 4 2017: 1 - 64 25 29 3 1 number, 2022: (D) - 344 (D) 63 - 32 2017: (D) - (D) 143 177 (D) (D) 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: - - - 2 - 2 - 2017: - - 2 3 - - - number, 2022: - - - (D) - (D) - 2017: - - (D) 109 - - - : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: - - - 2 - - - 2017: - - - - - 1 - number, 2022: - - - (D) - - - 2017: - - - - - (D) - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2022: 2 - 77 35 15 3 5 2017: 4 - 79 35 28 4 1 number, 2022: (D) - 756 292 355 52 35 2017: 24 - 750 389 844 (D) (D) $1,000, 2022: (D) - (D) (D) 43 10 5 2017: 5 - (D) (D) 81 (D) (D) : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 2 - 75 33 8 1 5 number: (D) - (D) (D) 35 (D) 35 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: - - - - 3 2 - number: - - - - 105 (D) - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - - 2 2 4 - - number: - - (D) (D) 215 - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 81 4 8 1 6 14 6 2017: 63 6 7 - 13 3 8 number, 2022: 1,206 49 (D) (D) 20 696 29 2017: 475 29 (D) - 42 47 95 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2022: 78 3 7 1 6 11 6 2017: 61 6 4 - 13 2 7 number, 2022: 606 (D) 68 (D) 20 72 29 2017: (D) 29 18 - 42 (D) (D) 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: - 1 - - - - - 2017: - - 2 - - 1 - number, 2022: - (D) - - - - - 2017: - - (D) - - (D) - : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: 2 - - - - - 1 number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - (D) 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: 3 - - - - 3 - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: 600 - - - - 624 - 2017: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2022: - - 1 - - - - 2017: - - 1 - - - - number, 2022: - - (D) - - - - 2017: - - (D) - - - - : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2022: 81 5 7 1 12 14 8 2017: 56 3 12 - 8 6 6 number, 2022: 1,342 228 (D) (D) 37 1,731 50 2017: 731 18 (D) - 40 38 193 $1,000, 2022: (D) 48 (D) (D) 10 309 14 2017: (D) (D) (D) - 4 (D) (D) : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 72 4 5 1 12 7 8 number: 432 (D) 53 (D) 37 (D) 50 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: 6 - 1 - - 2 - number: 235 - (D) - - (D) - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - 1 - - - - - number: - (D) - - - - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: 3 - - - - 5 - number: 675 - - - - 1,652 - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - 1 - - - - number: - - (D) - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 21 6 23 8 13 18 11 44 2017: 27 19 20 12 6 31 11 34 number, 2022: 165 79 102 24 730 139 115 268 2017: 309 70 92 75 (D) 249 49 203 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2022: 19 6 23 8 9 18 11 44 2017: 21 19 20 12 4 31 11 33 number, 2022: (D) 79 102 24 (D) 139 115 268 2017: 129 70 92 75 19 249 49 (D) 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 2 - - - 3 - - - 2017: 6 - - - - - - 1 number, 2022: (D) - - - (D) - - - 2017: 180 - - - - - - (D) : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - 1 - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - (D) - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - 1 - - - 2017: - - - - 1 - - - number, 2022: - - - - (D) - - - 2017: - - - - (D) - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2022: 29 6 23 4 11 31 8 56 2017: 29 22 27 12 13 37 9 51 number, 2022: 351 12 335 8 1,687 205 111 820 2017: 1,055 61 747 235 (D) 286 89 360 $1,000, 2022: 82 2 49 2 240 58 17 145 2017: (D) 10 (D) (D) (D) 67 6 73 : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 25 6 20 4 7 31 6 47 number: 115 12 60 8 (D) 205 (D) 335 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: 2 - - - - - 2 5 number: (D) - - - - - (D) (D) 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: 2 - 1 - - - - 3 number: (D) - (D) - - - - 150 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - 2 - 3 - - - number: - - (D) - (D) - - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - 1 number: - - - - - - - (D) 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - 1 - - - number: - - - - (D) - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 15 3 4 3 5 12 6 4 2017: 14 3 - 13 9 8 1 3 number, 2022: (D) 12 33 40 (D) 83 586 34 2017: (D) 21 - 77 621 58 (D) 46 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2022: 14 3 4 3 4 12 3 4 2017: 12 3 - 13 4 8 1 3 number, 2022: 96 12 33 40 18 83 10 34 2017: 90 21 - 77 11 58 (D) 46 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: 1 - - - 2 - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - (D) - - - : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - 1 - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - (D) - - - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - 3 - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - 576 - 2017: - - - - - - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - 1 - - - 2017: - - - - 2 - - - number, 2022: - - - - (D) - - - 2017: - - - - (D) - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - - 2017: 1 - - - - - - - number, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - - : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2022: 23 9 2 2 5 12 4 11 2017: 34 1 - 4 10 9 4 7 number, 2022: (D) 34 (D) (D) (D) 124 1,264 123 2017: (D) (D) - (D) 977 101 44 92 $1,000, 2022: (D) 11 (D) (D) (D) (D) 181 25 2017: (D) (D) - 19 181 9 (D) (D) : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 21 9 1 2 4 11 1 11 number: 105 34 (D) (D) 24 (D) (D) 123 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: 1 - 1 - - - - - number: (D) - (D) - - - - - 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - - - - 1 - 3 - number: - - - - (D) - (D) - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 1 - - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 12. Hogs and Pigs - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Total hogs and pigs .................................farms, 2022: 6 7 - 8 4 28 - 5 2017: 11 29 - 7 11 28 - 8 number, 2022: 71 13 - 14 158 823 - 26 2017: 284 212 - 38 57 (D) - 50 : Farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 .........................................farms, 2022: 5 7 - 8 1 25 - 5 2017: 7 27 - 7 11 27 - 8 number, 2022: (D) 13 - 14 (D) (D) - 26 2017: 30 (D) - 38 57 183 - 50 25 to 49 ........................................farms, 2022: 1 - - - - 2 - - 2017: 2 2 - - - - - - number, 2022: (D) - - - - (D) - - 2017: (D) (D) - - - - - - : 50 to 99 ........................................farms, 2022: - - - - 3 - - - 2017: 2 - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - (D) - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - - 100 to 199 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : 200 to 499 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ......................................farms, 2022: - - - - - 1 - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - (D) - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : 1,000 or more ...................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - 1 - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - (D) - - : SALES : : Hogs and pigs sold ..................................farms, 2022: 7 9 - - 8 33 3 10 2017: 13 35 - 4 9 16 5 8 number, 2022: 112 27 - - 306 (D) 18 70 2017: 500 1,209 - 26 36 (D) 40 130 $1,000, 2022: 16 (D) - - 79 (D) (D) (D) 2017: 54 (D) - (D) (D) (D) 13 15 : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 4 9 - - 5 31 3 8 number: 18 27 - - 24 205 18 (D) 25 to 49 ..............................................farms: 3 - - - - - - 2 number: 94 - - - - - - (D) 50 to 99 ..............................................farms: - - - - 3 - - - number: - - - - 282 - - - 100 to 199 ............................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - : 200 to 499 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - number: - - - - - (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Sales, and Wool Production: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2022: 1,208 74 10 31 14 8 48 2017: 1,447 103 8 48 26 19 67 number, 2022: 230,681 956 477 714 (D) 114 19,568 2017: 248,289 1,357 275 1,550 6,175 258 14,083 Hair sheep and wool-hair crosses (see text) .......farms, 2022: 309 22 4 7 - 4 7 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) number, 2022: 6,301 296 443 398 - 68 61 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 864 59 6 27 8 6 34 number: 7,962 499 34 (D) 85 (D) 301 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 252 15 2 1 3 2 5 number: 10,532 457 (D) (D) 90 (D) (D) 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 48 - 2 3 2 - 3 number: 8,301 - (D) 396 (D) - 550 300 to 999 ............................................farms: 10 - - - - - 1 number: 4,104 - - - - - (D) 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 34 - - - 1 - 5 number: 199,782 - - - (D) - 17,965 : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2022: 840 41 9 24 11 4 34 2017: 1,055 61 7 21 26 13 60 number, 2022: 198,506 561 482 576 (D) 60 13,161 2017: 202,225 677 346 618 2,570 144 9,806 $1,000, 2022: 40,930 89 116 73 (D) 7 2,864 2017: 36,844 108 47 92 382 23 1,842 : Wool production 1/ ..................................farms, 2022: 358 14 - 6 7 2 18 2017: 422 26 - 10 7 4 26 pounds, 2022: 1,703,443 1,480 - 860 (D) (D) 142,071 2017: 1,642,897 3,416 - 10,135 (D) 934 100,510 $1,000, 2022: 1,928 (Z) - (Z) (D) - (D) 2017: 2,069 2 (D) (D) (D) - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2022: 15 5 72 72 6 11 3 2017: 12 1 103 63 13 8 2 number, 2022: 4,356 34 1,059 1,399 287 242 (D) 2017: (D) (D) 1,414 1,794 1,926 848 (D) Hair sheep and wool-hair crosses (see text) .......farms, 2022: - 3 32 26 2 - 2 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) number, 2022: - 18 479 359 (D) - (D) 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 9 5 57 61 2 4 2 number: (D) 34 531 590 (D) 10 (D) 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 1 - 15 10 4 7 1 number: (D) - 528 (D) (D) 232 (D) 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 4 - - - - - - number: 520 - - - - - - 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - - - 1 - - - number: - - - (D) - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 1 - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2022: 15 5 52 50 14 2 3 2017: 13 1 75 48 13 5 2 number, 2022: (D) 57 373 564 172 (D) (D) 2017: (D) (D) 604 1,373 2,243 730 (D) $1,000, 2022: 868 10 80 119 31 (D) (D) 2017: (D) (D) 84 152 430 115 (D) : Wool production 1/ ..................................farms, 2022: 8 - 16 12 2 7 1 2017: 8 - 37 19 6 3 1 pounds, 2022: (D) - 2,014 2,872 (D) 1,270 (D) 2017: (D) - 3,989 11,422 15,580 8,097 (D) $1,000, 2022: (D) - 2 (D) - (D) - 2017: (D) - 4 3 - (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Sales, and Wool Production: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2022: 187 10 16 2 15 5 20 2017: 208 10 15 2 15 15 33 number, 2022: 15,767 825 10,144 (D) 228 719 455 2017: 12,716 2,186 8,075 (D) 103 741 535 Hair sheep and wool-hair crosses (see text) .......farms, 2022: 61 - 2 - 2 1 5 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) number, 2022: 1,336 - (D) - (D) (D) 151 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 127 2 12 - 14 1 14 number: (D) (D) (D) - (D) (D) 153 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 49 6 - - 1 - 6 number: 2,003 252 - - (D) - 302 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 9 2 1 - - 4 - number: 1,608 (D) (D) - - (D) - 300 to 999 ............................................farms: 1 - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 1 - 3 2 - - - number: (D) - 9,740 (D) - - - : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2022: 140 7 9 2 12 5 13 2017: 137 9 16 2 4 14 15 number, 2022: 15,411 320 8,765 (D) 253 405 351 2017: 15,722 2,288 10,117 (D) 47 782 341 $1,000, 2022: 3,163 55 1,836 (D) 32 54 58 2017: 2,896 241 1,911 (D) 5 90 45 : Wool production 1/ ..................................farms, 2022: 47 8 6 2 5 4 5 2017: 47 4 7 2 8 9 11 pounds, 2022: 124,431 4,124 74,060 (D) 1,460 4,694 970 2017: (D) 10,230 76,696 (D) 230 4,492 1,645 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) (D) (D) - (D) (Z) 2017: (D) (D) (D) (D) - 7 1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2022: 11 13 61 16 13 38 16 59 2017: 31 25 52 27 17 35 25 67 number, 2022: (D) (D) 4,359 (D) 485 18,901 312 866 2017: 664 (D) 5,771 14,954 611 (D) 3,903 1,221 Hair sheep and wool-hair crosses (see text) .......farms, 2022: 1 4 14 1 9 7 2 7 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) number, 2022: (D) 31 333 (D) 104 173 (D) 35 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 4 10 46 12 11 23 9 49 number: 47 41 420 114 (D) 228 38 388 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 5 2 11 2 - 12 7 10 number: 172 (D) 554 (D) - 423 274 478 100 to 299 ............................................farms: - - 2 - 2 - - - number: - - (D) - (D) - - - 300 to 999 ............................................farms: 1 - - - - - - - number: (D) - - - - - - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 1 1 2 2 - 3 - - number: (D) (D) (D) (D) - 18,250 - - : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2022: 14 11 38 15 11 26 9 23 2017: 17 14 46 35 11 23 18 59 number, 2022: (D) (D) 5,593 (D) 446 17,782 150 322 2017: 441 (D) 5,721 15,916 614 (D) 1,874 937 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 1,214 (D) 59 (D) 32 65 2017: 76 (D) 1,724 2,877 86 (D) 351 198 : Wool production 1/ ..................................farms, 2022: 4 4 23 3 3 7 7 15 2017: 2 4 14 16 7 9 7 19 pounds, 2022: (D) (D) 43,058 (D) 3,607 106,851 1,042 1,888 2017: (D) (D) 39,618 142,134 24,065 (D) (D) 4,517 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 65 (D) (D) (D) - - 2017: (D) (D) 84 239 6 (D) 1 1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 13. Sheep and Lambs - Inventory, Sales, and Wool Production: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2022: 68 31 2 23 10 28 12 11 2017: 77 23 3 23 9 48 20 18 number, 2022: 1,121 674 (D) 442 57 67,141 457 246 2017: 1,185 423 (D) 1,175 232 103,660 786 305 Hair sheep and wool-hair crosses (see text) .......farms, 2022: 24 18 - 5 2 5 2 3 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) number, 2022: 408 260 - 71 (D) 470 (D) 18 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 57 24 - 15 10 12 6 10 number: 547 313 - 168 57 136 (D) (D) 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 10 6 1 8 - 4 5 - number: (D) (D) (D) 274 - 206 203 - 100 to 299 ............................................farms: 1 1 - - - 3 1 1 number: (D) (D) - - - 450 (D) (D) 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - - 1 - - 3 - - number: - - (D) - - 1,059 - - 1,000 or more .........................................farms: - - - - - 6 - - number: - - - - - 65,290 - - : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2022: 38 22 4 11 4 23 9 8 2017: 42 23 3 19 8 37 13 8 number, 2022: 506 229 (D) 168 96 66,185 175 235 2017: 481 263 (D) 699 184 63,352 311 124 $1,000, 2022: 87 53 (D) 32 21 13,722 30 33 2017: 71 30 (D) 110 38 12,064 41 22 : Wool production 1/ ..................................farms, 2022: 23 3 2 4 2 12 3 5 2017: 18 7 2 7 4 19 4 3 pounds, 2022: 3,932 1,200 (D) 1,329 (D) 584,967 1,180 1,414 2017: 2,381 950 (D) 3,960 264 508,676 4,081 205 $1,000, 2022: 1 (D) (D) - - 750 (D) (D) 2017: 3 (D) (D) 5 - 692 (D) - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sheep and lambs inventory ...........................farms, 2022: 27 40 1 - 12 58 8 26 2017: 30 33 1 3 6 62 7 34 number, 2022: 11,347 1,060 (D) - 175 6,717 73 5,988 2017: 4,913 893 (D) 12 6 8,473 57 7,452 Hair sheep and wool-hair crosses (see text) .......farms, 2022: 6 2 - - 2 7 3 5 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) number, 2022: 213 (D) - - (D) 35 27 29 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 24 ...............................................farms: 19 25 1 - 10 35 8 18 number: (D) (D) (D) - (D) (D) 73 130 25 to 99 ..............................................farms: 6 13 - - 2 15 - 5 number: 263 445 - - (D) 770 - 202 100 to 299 ............................................farms: - 1 - - - 6 - - number: - (D) - - - 1,218 - - 300 to 999 ............................................farms: - 1 - - - - - 1 number: - (D) - - - - - (D) 1,000 or more .........................................farms: 2 - - - - 2 - 2 number: (D) - - - - (D) - (D) : Sheep and lambs sold ................................farms, 2022: 27 27 - 4 9 34 3 18 2017: 29 29 1 - - 42 6 30 number, 2022: 12,054 819 - 48 114 6,748 21 2,824 2017: 5,374 4,288 (D) - - 7,932 49 4,313 $1,000, 2022: 2,625 134 - 11 21 1,201 3 492 2017: 674 500 (D) - - 1,431 8 744 : Wool production 1/ ..................................farms, 2022: 12 15 - - 5 25 - 11 2017: 7 2 1 - - 23 - 12 pounds, 2022: 52,356 4,698 - - 510 57,347 - (D) 2017: 6,323 (D) (D) - - 72,388 - 78,750 $1,000, 2022: 93 (D) - - - 48 - (D) 2017: 57 - - - - 62 - 101 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 14. All Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 1,474 24,780 702 11,265 2,403 2017: 1,556 28,306 877 12,630 1,822 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 65 896 41 532 95 Adams ..................................: 8 74 8 82 11 Bannock ................................: 68 552 22 211 62 Bear Lake ..............................: 18 214 4 122 24 Benewah ................................: 12 159 5 7 1 Bingham ................................: 54 742 38 394 78 Blaine .................................: 9 95 5 36 6 Boise ..................................: 7 162 4 (D) 45 Bonner .................................: 82 656 34 219 47 Bonneville .............................: 81 673 37 315 71 : Boundary ...............................: 17 630 10 139 17 Butte ..................................: 10 30 1 (D) (D) Camas ..................................: 4 24 - - - Canyon .................................: 231 3,003 88 1,310 302 Caribou ................................: 19 200 14 145 42 Cassia .................................: 9 228 8 112 22 Clearwater .............................: 10 115 7 73 22 Custer .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Elmore .................................: 30 632 18 293 64 Franklin ...............................: 46 537 22 427 77 : Fremont ................................: 16 235 10 71 10 Gem ....................................: 80 712 17 213 50 Gooding ................................: 18 1,328 10 478 (D) Idaho ..................................: 19 1,852 12 923 142 Jefferson ..............................: 81 625 33 228 53 Jerome .................................: 34 913 23 635 100 Kootenai ...............................: 80 881 37 429 87 Latah ..................................: 25 447 18 157 30 Lemhi ..................................: 19 244 3 34 10 Lewis ..................................: 4 (D) - - - : Lincoln ................................: 6 210 3 80 25 Madison ................................: 7 54 7 16 4 Minidoka ...............................: 25 545 17 211 43 Nez Perce ..............................: 28 550 14 196 42 Oneida .................................: 21 944 13 356 110 Owyhee .................................: 23 432 12 142 58 Payette ................................: 51 781 24 343 57 Power ..................................: 5 163 3 167 19 Shoshone ...............................: 16 168 4 60 16 Teton ..................................: 8 52 6 103 21 : Twin Falls .............................: 99 1,628 47 898 179 Valley .................................: 5 88 2 (D) (D) Washington .............................: 22 2,220 19 812 225 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 15. Milk Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 547 7,373 276 3,713 762 2017: 598 10,765 366 3,538 553 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 27 427 20 275 (D) Adams ..................................: 4 34 6 (D) (D) Bannock ................................: 19 191 5 32 9 Bear Lake ..............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Benewah ................................: 3 21 2 (D) (D) Bingham ................................: 18 374 14 203 45 Blaine .................................: 4 70 3 (D) (D) Boise ..................................: 3 9 - - - Bonner .................................: 43 346 22 146 28 Bonneville .............................: 40 221 24 107 23 : Boundary ...............................: 6 (D) 1 (D) (D) Butte ..................................: 10 (D) 1 (D) (D) Canyon .................................: 72 636 30 340 57 Caribou ................................: 11 128 4 62 19 Cassia .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Clearwater .............................: 5 100 5 (D) (D) Custer .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Elmore .................................: 16 321 6 124 28 Franklin ...............................: 16 312 11 (D) (D) Fremont ................................: 13 105 6 42 7 : Gem ....................................: 27 (D) 6 128 28 Gooding ................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) (D) Idaho ..................................: 3 (D) - - - Jefferson ..............................: 24 162 10 43 10 Jerome .................................: 9 96 9 146 19 Kootenai ...............................: 38 527 21 294 61 Latah ..................................: 14 74 4 14 4 Lemhi ..................................: 7 112 1 (D) (D) Lincoln ................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) Minidoka ...............................: 14 172 14 105 12 : Nez Perce ..............................: 11 (D) 7 91 17 Oneida .................................: 12 123 6 45 11 Owyhee .................................: 7 103 6 (D) (D) Payette ................................: 14 52 3 7 1 Shoshone ...............................: 12 (D) 4 60 16 Teton ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Twin Falls .............................: 20 613 12 520 83 Valley .................................: 3 (D) - - - Washington .............................: 9 58 5 13 2 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 16. Angora Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Angora goats : Mohair :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales : Clipped 1/ : :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: : : : : : Value : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) : Farms : Pounds : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 122 763 23 112 15 20 4,213 (D) 2017: 107 360 30 60 5 9 520 28 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 7 35 1 (D) (D) - - - Bannock ................................: 11 32 - - - - - - Blaine .................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - Bonner .................................: 14 36 5 27 4 3 60 - Bonneville .............................: 13 102 - - - 2 (D) - Boundary ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) (D) Canyon .................................: 10 47 - - - - - - Elmore .................................: 4 12 4 12 1 - - - Franklin ...............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - Fremont ................................: 5 49 3 (D) (D) - - - : Gem ....................................: 2 (D) - - - - - - Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) - - - - - - Jefferson ..............................: 7 22 - - - - - - Jerome .................................: 4 8 - - - 4 52 - Kootenai ...............................: 6 23 - - - - - - Lewis ..................................: 3 (D) - - - - - - Lincoln ................................: 2 (D) - - - 2 (D) - Nez Perce ..............................: 2 (D) - - - 2 (D) - Owyhee .................................: 7 103 2 (D) (D) 3 70 - Payette ................................: 3 6 - - - - - - : Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 9 56 4 24 2 - - - Washington .............................: 3 (D) - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1/Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 17. Meat Goats and Other Goats - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 978 16,644 441 7,440 1,626 2017: 1,056 17,181 585 9,032 1,264 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 38 434 20 (D) 51 Adams ..................................: 4 40 2 (D) (D) Bannock ................................: 39 329 17 179 54 Bear Lake ..............................: 17 (D) 3 (D) (D) Benewah ................................: 11 138 3 (D) (D) Bingham ................................: 41 368 25 191 33 Blaine .................................: 2 (D) - - - Boise ..................................: 7 153 4 (D) 45 Bonner .................................: 32 274 9 46 15 Bonneville .............................: 52 350 20 208 48 : Boundary ...............................: 11 496 8 (D) (D) Butte ..................................: 1 (D) - - - Camas ..................................: 4 24 - - - Canyon .................................: 162 2,320 65 970 244 Caribou ................................: 9 72 10 83 22 Cassia .................................: 7 (D) 7 (D) (D) Clearwater .............................: 5 15 2 (D) (D) Elmore .................................: 15 299 9 157 35 Franklin ...............................: 32 (D) 14 300 52 Fremont ................................: 7 81 1 (D) (D) : Gem ....................................: 64 496 11 85 22 Gooding ................................: 17 (D) 9 (D) 12 Idaho ..................................: 14 1,840 12 923 142 Jefferson ..............................: 61 441 26 185 43 Jerome .................................: 22 809 15 489 80 Kootenai ...............................: 51 331 18 135 25 Latah ..................................: 19 373 14 143 26 Lemhi ..................................: 18 132 2 (D) (D) Lewis ..................................: 1 (D) - - - Lincoln ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) : Madison ................................: 7 54 7 16 4 Minidoka ...............................: 18 373 7 106 32 Nez Perce ..............................: 23 420 10 105 25 Oneida .................................: 9 821 7 311 99 Owyhee .................................: 9 226 4 70 36 Payette ................................: 43 723 22 336 56 Power ..................................: 5 163 3 167 19 Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - - Teton ..................................: 7 (D) 5 (D) (D) Twin Falls .............................: 74 959 31 354 95 : Valley .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Washington .............................: 15 (D) 16 799 223 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 18. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ HORSES AND PONIES : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 6,660 41,412 989 3,200 12,750 2017: 8,399 48,469 1,441 4,575 11,920 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 331 2,043 58 139 (D) Adams ..................................: 102 604 1 (D) (D) Bannock ................................: 325 1,756 45 96 547 Bear Lake ..............................: 137 1,033 13 55 (D) Benewah ................................: 51 220 7 9 15 Bingham ................................: 368 2,480 54 144 (D) Blaine .................................: 88 745 18 58 (D) Boise ..................................: 42 180 10 19 (D) Bonner .................................: 225 1,101 47 101 (D) Bonneville .............................: 284 1,785 36 117 529 : Boundary ...............................: 54 302 2 (D) (D) Butte ..................................: 34 219 4 11 35 Camas ..................................: 27 81 4 4 5 Canyon .................................: 676 3,664 98 288 1,288 Caribou ................................: 138 925 21 62 (D) Cassia .................................: 169 930 18 31 200 Clark ..................................: 22 197 3 6 (D) Clearwater .............................: 64 270 4 4 13 Custer .................................: 113 1,125 23 66 318 Elmore .................................: 117 746 22 45 157 : Franklin ...............................: 240 1,561 42 135 352 Fremont ................................: 119 934 14 106 (D) Gem ....................................: 232 1,223 30 74 212 Gooding ................................: 130 838 13 47 (D) Idaho ..................................: 199 972 28 88 210 Jefferson ..............................: 259 1,609 51 105 448 Jerome .................................: 88 464 9 24 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 254 1,410 47 112 870 Latah ..................................: 157 641 18 48 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 146 1,092 20 134 603 : Lewis ..................................: 27 161 2 (D) (D) Lincoln ................................: 67 466 13 21 42 Madison ................................: 68 689 8 91 (D) Minidoka ...............................: 97 572 26 34 128 Nez Perce ..............................: 119 553 11 47 (D) Oneida .................................: 107 632 22 78 (D) Owyhee .................................: 158 1,184 24 72 (D) Payette ................................: 173 2,129 29 64 228 Power ..................................: 71 567 6 46 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 8 77 3 3 15 : Teton ..................................: 88 834 10 36 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 281 1,385 49 174 711 Valley .................................: 50 203 6 11 24 Washington .............................: 155 810 20 (D) (D) : MULES, BURROS, AND DONKEYS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 903 2,716 73 597 201 2017: 1,143 3,147 99 715 584 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 43 101 1 (D) (D) Adams ..................................: 19 47 2 (D) (D) Bannock ................................: 36 73 3 9 4 Bear Lake ..............................: 15 76 3 12 5 Benewah ................................: 6 23 4 (D) 2 Bingham ................................: 25 34 1 (D) (D) Blaine .................................: 10 64 1 (D) (D) Boise ..................................: 7 13 2 (D) (D) Bonner .................................: 61 113 2 (D) (D) Bonneville .............................: 32 126 4 10 4 : Boundary ...............................: 3 25 1 (D) (D) Butte ..................................: 5 9 - - - Camas ..................................: 5 8 - - - Canyon .................................: 106 448 10 428 55 Caribou ................................: 11 18 2 (D) (D) Cassia .................................: 6 11 - - - Clark ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Clearwater .............................: 24 51 - - - Custer .................................: 18 92 - - - Elmore .................................: 7 8 - - - : Franklin ...............................: 28 65 3 5 1 Fremont ................................: 6 11 - - - Gem ....................................: 40 130 6 15 5 Gooding ................................: 9 20 - - - Idaho ..................................: 34 102 - - - Jefferson ..............................: 29 89 8 12 7 Jerome .................................: 6 14 2 (D) (D) Kootenai ...............................: 39 147 3 6 3 Latah ..................................: 27 57 2 (D) (D) Lemhi ..................................: 28 209 - - - Lewis ..................................: 9 19 - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 18. Equine - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sales :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : Value ($1,000) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ MULES, BURROS, AND : DONKEYS - Con. : : Counties, 2022 - Con. : : Lincoln ................................: 8 14 - - - Madison ................................: 11 18 1 (D) (D) Minidoka ...............................: 15 17 - - - Nez Perce ..............................: 19 50 1 (D) (D) Oneida .................................: 15 64 - - - Owyhee .................................: 6 12 1 (D) (D) Payette ................................: 25 47 4 6 3 Power ..................................: 8 10 2 (D) (D) Shoshone ...............................: 6 (D) - - - Teton ..................................: 9 19 - - - : Twin Falls .............................: 54 152 3 13 6 Valley .................................: 9 16 - - - Washington .............................: 22 82 1 (D) (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2022: 3,678 267 18 223 39 41 147 2017: 3,791 309 30 94 37 34 142 : Layers ............................................farms, 2022: 3,514 258 18 206 38 39 140 2017: 3,579 303 28 91 37 34 136 number, 2022: 638,424 4,662 341 3,448 646 962 3,548 2017: 472,192 5,156 316 2,423 543 761 2,673 : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49...................................................: 3,277 247 18 198 37 37 130 50 to 99..................................................: 179 8 - 5 1 - 6 100 to 399................................................: 44 2 - 3 - 2 2 400 to 3,199..............................................: 9 1 - - - - 2 3,200 to 9,999............................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999..........................................: 1 - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999..........................................: 2 - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more...........................................: 2 - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2022: 447 25 2 24 4 5 18 2017: 535 20 3 6 4 5 30 number, 2022: (D) 721 (D) 312 72 50 560 2017: (D) 964 32 63 60 72 394 Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2022: 350 31 - 19 6 7 12 2017: 430 30 1 6 10 2 20 number, 2022: 12,403 594 - 322 85 127 449 2017: 11,548 201 (D) 54 126 (D) 289 : Turkeys ...........................................farms, 2022: 297 19 - 23 3 10 19 2017: 314 18 5 2 2 3 8 number, 2022: 4,644 68 - 46 27 102 104 2017: 4,793 220 22 (D) (D) 3 44 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry ..........................................farms, 2022: 999 59 4 63 5 13 36 2017: 938 62 5 25 12 3 57 : NUMBER SOLD : : Any poultry sold ....................................farms, 2022: 1,751 130 13 88 13 19 83 2017: 1,990 164 7 47 18 18 99 : Layers sold .......................................farms, 2022: 358 14 - 13 2 2 10 2017: 503 46 2 8 9 1 23 number, 2022: (D) 721 - 128 (D) (D) 1,021 2017: 295,644 341 (D) 188 60 (D) 482 Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2022: 43 2 - - - - 4 2017: 32 - - - - - 3 number, 2022: (D) (D) - - - - 400 2017: (D) - - - - - 30 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2022: 155 4 - 7 1 3 12 2017: 213 13 4 3 6 3 13 number, 2022: 11,815 305 - 139 (D) 66 434 2017: 17,852 124 (D) 30 6 85 653 : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999................................................: 155 4 - 7 1 3 12 2,000 to 59,999...........................................: - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999........................................: - - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999........................................: - - - - - - - 500,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - : Turkeys sold ......................................farms, 2022: 95 12 - 2 - - 9 2017: 170 15 1 2 - - 6 number, 2022: 4,156 41 - (D) - - 38 2017: 4,905 182 (D) (D) - - 21 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry sold .....................................farms, 2022: 188 9 - 9 - 5 9 2017: 225 11 2 2 6 - 12 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2022: 22 26 256 145 55 12 12 2017: 14 19 358 180 52 14 16 : Layers ............................................farms, 2022: 21 23 250 139 48 10 10 2017: 14 19 335 166 47 14 15 number, 2022: 501 497 5,589 1,965 1,064 92 227 2017: 226 377 (D) 2,823 970 284 301 : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49...................................................: 20 20 222 135 45 10 10 50 to 99..................................................: 1 3 21 4 3 - - 100 to 399................................................: - - 7 - - - - 400 to 3,199..............................................: - - - - - - - 3,200 to 9,999............................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2022: 2 3 46 9 1 1 - 2017: 1 2 66 26 13 7 4 number, 2022: (D) 15 477 64 (D) (D) - 2017: (D) (D) 772 319 167 59 60 Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2022: 1 - 32 7 4 2 4 2017: - - 60 9 5 3 5 number, 2022: (D) - 2,582 186 144 (D) 160 2017: - - 1,717 200 (D) 45 49 : Turkeys ...........................................farms, 2022: 2 - 20 22 - 1 - 2017: 2 - 31 25 - 3 - number, 2022: (D) - 77 81 - (D) - 2017: (D) - 143 216 - 90 - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry ..........................................farms, 2022: 4 16 92 38 13 3 6 2017: 1 5 114 66 7 5 5 : NUMBER SOLD : : Any poultry sold ....................................farms, 2022: 16 8 145 57 41 2 8 2017: 7 11 228 98 30 9 8 : Layers sold .......................................farms, 2022: 3 3 39 18 6 1 4 2017: 2 - 40 26 15 - - number, 2022: 36 120 1,468 233 657 (D) 80 2017: (D) - 1,169 507 210 - - Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2022: - - 7 2 - - - 2017: 1 - 2 4 1 3 - number, 2022: - - 159 (D) - - - 2017: (D) - (D) 36 (D) 15 - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2022: - - 7 - 5 - - 2017: 1 - 24 3 4 3 1 number, 2022: - - 1,505 - 214 - - 2017: (D) - 1,752 70 624 15 (D) : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999................................................: - - 7 - 5 - - 2,000 to 59,999...........................................: - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999........................................: - - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999........................................: - - - - - - - 500,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - : Turkeys sold ......................................farms, 2022: - - 6 2 - 1 - 2017: - - 19 13 - 3 - number, 2022: - - 35 (D) - (D) - 2017: - - 84 108 - 45 - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry sold .....................................farms, 2022: 1 - 24 13 - - - 2017: 1 1 29 22 1 2 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2022: 524 46 34 3 34 23 61 2017: 468 63 46 - 55 25 70 : Layers ............................................farms, 2022: 496 46 32 1 32 22 61 2017: 433 61 46 - 48 25 70 number, 2022: 31,361 867 (D) (D) 629 568 1,583 2017: 25,161 1,088 (D) - 647 310 2,306 : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49...................................................: 453 43 29 1 30 19 57 50 to 99..................................................: 31 3 2 - 2 3 3 100 to 399................................................: 5 - - - - - 1 400 to 3,199..............................................: 6 - - - - - - 3,200 to 9,999............................................: - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999..........................................: 1 - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 or more...........................................: - - 1 - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2022: 60 6 3 - 2 4 8 2017: 69 14 4 - 1 2 16 number, 2022: 982 80 40 - (D) 57 261 2017: 3,006 165 63 - (D) (D) 141 Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2022: 57 5 5 3 3 2 2 2017: 42 - 3 - 6 4 13 number, 2022: 2,056 54 159 408 89 (D) (D) 2017: 1,204 - 75 - 60 12 143 : Turkeys ...........................................farms, 2022: 36 - 6 1 - 4 3 2017: 56 5 8 - - 2 10 number, 2022: 3,059 - 56 (D) - 66 10 2017: 2,333 10 19 - - (D) 87 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry ..........................................farms, 2022: 147 12 12 - 6 4 17 2017: 94 17 10 - 14 6 20 : NUMBER SOLD : : Any poultry sold ....................................farms, 2022: 268 25 14 1 14 12 33 2017: 235 31 24 - 23 2 45 : Layers sold .......................................farms, 2022: 51 5 3 - - - 1 2017: 74 5 10 - 8 2 12 number, 2022: 7,188 52 110 - - - (D) 2017: 2,682 (D) 44 - 48 (D) 179 Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2022: 7 - 2 - - - 3 2017: 8 3 - - - - - number, 2022: 121 - (D) - - - 154 2017: 430 (D) - - - - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2022: 42 4 2 - - 1 3 2017: 40 - 3 - - 2 3 number, 2022: 4,198 96 (D) - - (D) (D) 2017: 3,705 - 52 - - (D) (D) : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999................................................: 42 4 2 - - 1 3 2,000 to 59,999...........................................: - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999........................................: - - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999........................................: - - - - - - - 500,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - : Turkeys sold ......................................farms, 2022: 23 - 3 - - - 3 2017: 39 - 2 - - 2 1 number, 2022: 3,498 - 26 - - - 30 2017: 3,089 - (D) - - (D) (D) : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry sold .....................................farms, 2022: 30 - 1 - 1 - 1 2017: 28 - 2 - 2 - 6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2022: 98 44 169 48 78 101 43 265 2017: 72 39 163 48 92 86 49 280 : Layers ............................................farms, 2022: 94 41 163 45 73 95 39 259 2017: 67 39 150 39 91 86 44 268 number, 2022: (D) 938 2,622 556 1,233 1,638 (D) 4,617 2017: (D) 961 3,134 831 2,253 1,344 891 4,905 : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49...................................................: 92 35 157 45 68 85 35 247 50 to 99..................................................: 1 5 5 - 5 10 2 9 100 to 399................................................: - 1 1 - - - 1 3 400 to 3,199..............................................: - - - - - - - - 3,200 to 9,999............................................: - - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999..........................................: - - - - - - 1 - 50,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 or more...........................................: 1 - - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2022: 14 7 20 3 9 11 8 46 2017: 5 1 37 5 26 10 2 39 number, 2022: (D) 84 137 31 275 216 111 640 2017: (D) (D) 616 104 370 66 (D) 709 Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2022: 8 2 13 8 4 12 11 15 2017: 3 14 33 8 16 6 13 27 number, 2022: 169 (D) 411 106 88 90 162 432 2017: 45 310 1,328 158 252 300 190 521 : Turkeys ...........................................farms, 2022: 9 7 14 8 1 14 11 10 2017: - 4 17 3 3 15 6 11 number, 2022: 15 72 73 36 (D) 70 46 30 2017: - 8 250 40 20 35 98 317 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry ..........................................farms, 2022: 24 17 64 9 22 22 12 68 2017: 22 6 59 18 14 11 9 74 : NUMBER SOLD : : Any poultry sold ....................................farms, 2022: 30 30 71 13 41 42 22 113 2017: 38 25 72 21 51 41 31 161 : Layers sold .......................................farms, 2022: 12 14 14 2 10 13 2 15 2017: 18 7 13 2 17 11 - 29 number, 2022: (D) 211 209 (D) 246 1,061 (D) 236 2017: (D) 106 130 (D) 640 121 - 4,233 Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2022: 1 - 1 - 1 - 2 5 2017: 1 - 1 - - - 1 3 number, 2022: (D) - (D) - (D) - (D) 96 2017: (D) - (D) - - - (D) 60 : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2022: 3 1 5 2 - 6 4 8 2017: 4 6 13 - 5 - 5 13 number, 2022: 72 (D) 116 (D) - 325 260 142 2017: 53 72 541 - 132 - 110 245 : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999................................................: 3 1 5 2 - 6 4 8 2,000 to 59,999...........................................: - - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999........................................: - - - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999........................................: - - - - - - - - 500,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - - : Turkeys sold ......................................farms, 2022: - 4 1 - - 4 2 3 2017: - 6 13 1 3 - 4 9 number, 2022: - 8 (D) - - 20 (D) (D) 2017: - 60 231 (D) 10 - 12 86 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry sold .....................................farms, 2022: 7 7 5 1 5 9 3 9 2017: 2 6 12 1 3 - 5 13 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2022: 108 55 16 23 25 45 59 52 2017: 159 60 7 34 46 59 68 31 : Layers ............................................farms, 2022: 97 55 16 23 23 45 58 48 2017: 149 58 6 34 41 50 64 31 number, 2022: 1,777 988 211 526 352 667 949 1,029 2017: 2,677 923 65 705 637 502 812 303 : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49...................................................: 92 52 15 20 23 43 56 41 50 to 99..................................................: 5 3 1 3 - 2 2 5 100 to 399................................................: - - - - - - - 2 400 to 3,199..............................................: - - - - - - - - 3,200 to 9,999............................................: - - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 50,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2022: 21 7 4 3 4 7 9 11 2017: 32 14 - 2 1 1 16 1 number, 2022: 234 112 46 6 14 37 102 60 2017: 354 192 - (D) (D) (D) 151 (D) Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2022: 14 7 2 - 1 6 1 - 2017: 11 10 1 5 6 16 1 - number, 2022: 456 177 (D) - (D) 127 (D) - 2017: 600 400 (D) 210 95 354 (D) - : Turkeys ...........................................farms, 2022: 1 6 1 3 2 7 - 2 2017: 3 11 2 4 - 3 - - number, 2022: (D) 96 (D) 9 (D) 26 - (D) 2017: 7 84 (D) 140 - 30 - - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry ..........................................farms, 2022: 32 17 4 6 3 15 11 12 2017: 31 17 5 9 7 19 12 - : NUMBER SOLD : : Any poultry sold ....................................farms, 2022: 60 28 5 10 13 19 21 22 2017: 92 29 4 17 27 13 27 16 : Layers sold .......................................farms, 2022: 18 8 2 3 4 6 8 5 2017: 16 5 - 8 4 5 12 11 number, 2022: 1,893 24 (D) 64 60 66 515 114 2017: 1,097 79 - 141 36 (D) 56 73 Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - 1 - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - (D) - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2022: 4 4 - - - - - - 2017: 9 2 - - 4 3 - - number, 2022: 998 750 - - - - - - 2017: 379 (D) - - 80 180 - - : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999................................................: 4 4 - - - - - - 2,000 to 59,999...........................................: - - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999........................................: - - - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999........................................: - - - - - - - - 500,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - - : Turkeys sold ......................................farms, 2022: 1 2 - - 2 - - - 2017: - 1 - - - 5 - - number, 2022: (D) (D) - - (D) - - - 2017: - (D) - - - 50 - - : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry sold .....................................farms, 2022: 10 2 - - - - 3 2 2017: 6 9 1 4 2 5 7 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 19. Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY : : Any poultry .........................................farms, 2022: 58 84 17 20 30 164 18 70 2017: 62 110 15 8 39 141 11 86 : Layers ............................................farms, 2022: 54 82 15 20 30 162 18 69 2017: 52 106 10 8 36 138 6 84 number, 2022: 740 1,608 160 318 1,493 (D) 430 1,160 2017: 807 3,833 163 172 672 2,742 83 2,333 : 2022 farms by inventory: : 1 to 49...................................................: 52 74 15 20 18 153 16 62 50 to 99..................................................: 2 5 - - 7 2 2 7 100 to 399................................................: - 3 - - 5 6 - - 400 to 3,199..............................................: - - - - - - - - 3,200 to 9,999............................................: - - - - - - - - 10,000 to 19,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 20,000 to 49,999..........................................: - - - - - 1 - - 50,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - - : Pullets for laying flock replacement ..............farms, 2022: 2 7 - - 7 16 2 6 2017: - 11 - 2 8 22 1 6 number, 2022: (D) 254 - - 164 194 (D) 78 2017: - 846 - (D) 32 249 (D) 268 Broilers and other meat-type chickens .............farms, 2022: 3 13 - 6 2 7 10 3 2017: 3 9 2 - - 12 - 15 number, 2022: 65 637 - 570 (D) 715 319 115 2017: 33 214 (D) - - 359 - 1,625 : Turkeys ...........................................farms, 2022: 2 7 - - 3 17 - 3 2017: 3 15 - - 6 22 2 4 number, 2022: (D) 37 - - 13 83 - 12 2017: 31 77 - - 63 259 (D) 19 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry ..........................................farms, 2022: 20 22 4 8 6 31 5 15 2017: 16 21 3 6 13 14 6 18 : NUMBER SOLD : : Any poultry sold ....................................farms, 2022: 20 47 3 10 27 71 15 28 2017: 26 64 7 5 17 59 4 39 : Layers sold .......................................farms, 2022: 4 11 - - 5 18 4 5 2017: 9 23 - - 4 15 - 11 number, 2022: 24 110 - - 72 221 26 53 2017: 48 (D) - - 128 101 - (D) Pullets for laying flock replacement sold .........farms, 2022: - - - - - 6 - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - 44 - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Broilers and other meat-type chickens sold ........farms, 2022: - 7 - 6 1 4 7 2 2017: - 1 2 - - 12 - 8 number, 2022: - 308 - 120 (D) 304 201 (D) 2017: - (D) (D) - - 718 - 7,460 : 2022 farms by number sold: : 1 to 1,999................................................: - 7 - 6 1 4 7 2 2,000 to 59,999...........................................: - - - - - - - - 60,000 to 99,999..........................................: - - - - - - - - 100,000 to 199,999........................................: - - - - - - - - 200,000 to 499,999........................................: - - - - - - - - 500,000 or more...........................................: - - - - - - - - : Turkeys sold ......................................farms, 2022: - 3 - - 4 6 - 2 2017: 1 11 - - 5 5 - 3 number, 2022: - 10 - - 40 28 - (D) 2017: (D) 45 - - 42 37 - 745 : Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous : poultry sold .....................................farms, 2022: 3 7 1 - 2 6 - 3 2017: 2 8 - - 3 1 - 8 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sold :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ CHUKARS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 17 2,985 10 18,167 2017: 22 11,966 11 41,176 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) - - Bonner .................................: - - 2 (D) Canyon .................................: - - 2 (D) Elmore .................................: 2 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 3 55 - - Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 4 (D) Jerome .................................: - - 1 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 3 150 - - Payette ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Teton ..................................: 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 2 (D) - - : DUCKS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 449 5,611 71 (D) 2017: 366 8,124 70 (D) : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 37 223 4 83 Adams ..................................: 2 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 29 257 5 20 Bear Lake ..............................: 4 13 - - Benewah ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Bingham ................................: 5 62 4 8 Boise ..................................: 3 3 - - Bonner .................................: 50 518 11 68 Bonneville .............................: 28 202 7 22 Boundary ...............................: 7 78 - - : Butte ..................................: 1 (D) - - Camas ..................................: 2 (D) - - Canyon .................................: 66 412 10 54 Caribou ................................: 8 14 - - Cassia .................................: 2 (D) - - Clearwater .............................: 3 10 - - Custer .................................: 3 46 - - Elmore .................................: 4 32 - - Franklin ...............................: 6 22 - - Fremont ................................: 6 14 3 24 : Gem ....................................: 25 383 4 17 Gooding ................................: 2 (D) - - Idaho ..................................: 9 88 - - Jefferson ..............................: 11 45 - - Jerome .................................: 4 42 1 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 33 189 3 36 Latah ..................................: 14 55 9 82 Lemhi ..................................: 3 21 - - Lewis ..................................: 2 (D) - - Lincoln ................................: 1 (D) - - : Madison ................................: 2 (D) - - Minidoka ...............................: 8 30 - - Nez Perce ..............................: 6 56 - - Oneida .................................: 9 97 - - Owyhee .................................: 8 119 - - Payette ................................: 10 (D) 3 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 4 16 - - Teton ..................................: 6 106 2 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 16 130 3 36 Valley .................................: 3 18 - - Washington .............................: 5 14 - - : EMUS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 25 99 1 (D) 2017: 12 74 - - : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 7 26 - - Bonner .................................: 4 7 - - Bonneville .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Canyon .................................: 3 7 - - Cassia .................................: 1 (D) - - Elmore .................................: 2 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 3 30 - - Twin Falls .............................: 2 (D) - - : GEESE : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 137 589 33 121 2017: 145 721 26 361 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sold :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ GEESE - Con. : : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) Bannock ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Bear Lake ..............................: 2 (D) - - Bingham ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Blaine .................................: 1 (D) - - Bonner .................................: 18 72 1 (D) Bonneville .............................: 8 28 - - Boundary ...............................: 4 14 - - Camas ..................................: 1 (D) - - Canyon .................................: 21 68 4 7 : Cassia .................................: 1 (D) - - Elmore .................................: 4 10 - - Franklin ...............................: 1 (D) - - Fremont ................................: - - 3 6 Gem ....................................: 3 21 - - Gooding ................................: 2 (D) - - Idaho ..................................: 3 3 - - Jefferson ..............................: 5 5 - - Jerome .................................: 2 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 6 27 - - : Latah ..................................: 13 29 6 6 Lincoln ................................: 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 3 7 Oneida .................................: 4 6 2 (D) Owyhee .................................: 9 52 3 48 Payette ................................: 7 45 4 6 Teton ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 8 90 - - Valley .................................: 3 6 - - Washington .............................: 1 (D) - - : GUINEAS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 142 946 12 93 2017: 106 871 32 307 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 3 8 - - Bannock ................................: 7 57 - - Bear Lake ..............................: 1 (D) - - Benewah ................................: 4 8 - - Bingham ................................: 5 32 - - Boise ..................................: 6 36 - - Bonner .................................: 7 140 3 27 Bonneville .............................: 3 33 1 (D) Boundary ...............................: 2 (D) - - Camas ..................................: 2 (D) - - : Canyon .................................: 28 217 1 (D) Caribou ................................: 1 (D) - - Cassia .................................: 1 (D) - - Clearwater .............................: 2 (D) - - Custer .................................: 2 (D) - - Elmore .................................: 6 8 - - Franklin ...............................: 5 8 3 3 Gem ....................................: 9 46 - - Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Jefferson ..............................: 6 11 3 3 : Jerome .................................: 6 12 - - Kootenai ...............................: 5 30 - - Latah ..................................: 5 129 - - Lemhi ..................................: 3 11 - - Lewis ..................................: 4 8 - - Madison ................................: 2 (D) - - Owyhee .................................: 4 14 - - Payette ................................: 3 36 - - Power ..................................: 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 7 16 - - : HUNGARIAN PARTRIDGE : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 3 (D) 3 17,000 2017: - - - - : Counties, 2022 : : Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) : OSTRICHES : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: - - 2 (D) 2017: - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sold :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ OSTRICHES - Con. : : Counties, 2022 : : Twin Falls .............................: - - 2 (D) : PEACOCKS OR PEAHENS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 88 651 7 16 2017: 58 600 11 73 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 11 65 2 (D) Bingham ................................: 6 18 - - Bonner .................................: 5 38 - - Bonneville .............................: 2 (D) - - Canyon .................................: 6 60 - - Cassia .................................: 6 55 - - Elmore .................................: 7 93 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 5 18 - - Fremont ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) : Gem ....................................: 6 26 - - Gooding ................................: 2 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 2 (D) - - Lemhi ..................................: 3 20 2 (D) Minidoka ...............................: 2 (D) - - Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) - - Payette ................................: 3 16 - - Power ..................................: 4 (D) - - Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 11 85 - - : PHEASANTS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 21 28,359 14 94,488 2017: 37 40,828 17 97,685 : Counties, 2022 : : Bannock ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Benewah ................................: 2 (D) - - Bingham ................................: - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 3 15 2 (D) Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 4 111 1 (D) Gooding ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 4 40,050 Jerome .................................: - - 1 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 1 (D) - - : Owyhee .................................: 2 (D) - - Payette ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Teton ..................................: 2 (D) - - : PIGEONS OR SQUAB : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 36 1,682 7 443 2017: 34 5,117 13 5,970 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 1 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 3 60 - - Boise ..................................: 3 6 - - Bonner .................................: 3 60 - - Bonneville .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Canyon .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Cassia .................................: 1 (D) - - Franklin ...............................: 2 (D) - - Fremont ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Jefferson ..............................: 3 12 - - : Kootenai ...............................: 5 212 - - Latah ..................................: 7 116 - - Power ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Teton ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) - - : QUAIL : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 48 2,872 14 1,779 2017: 24 4,606 8 2,285 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 2 (D) - - Benewah ................................: 2 (D) - - Bonner .................................: 9 295 2 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sold :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ QUAIL - Con. : : Counties, 2022 - Con. : : Bonneville .............................: 2 (D) 5 68 Canyon .................................: 12 274 4 120 Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) Custer .................................: 2 (D) - - Fremont ................................: 4 92 - - Jefferson ..............................: 3 3 - - Jerome .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) Teton ..................................: 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 2 (D) - - : ROOSTERS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 503 13,688 74 (D) 2017: 426 (D) 88 (D) : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 19 34 5 13 Adams ..................................: 2 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 16 43 - - Bear Lake ..............................: 1 (D) - - Benewah ................................: 9 28 5 29 Bingham ................................: 26 89 4 26 Blaine .................................: 3 12 1 (D) Boise ..................................: 10 26 - - Bonner .................................: 48 130 13 39 Bonneville .............................: 6 18 - - : Boundary ...............................: 4 5 - - Butte ..................................: 2 (D) - - Camas ..................................: 3 3 - - Canyon .................................: 89 (D) 16 (D) Caribou ................................: 9 19 - - Cassia .................................: 6 (D) 1 (D) Clearwater .............................: 2 (D) - - Custer .................................: 3 13 - - Elmore .................................: 6 18 - - Franklin ...............................: 6 37 3 27 : Fremont ................................: 10 23 3 3 Gem ....................................: 28 68 1 (D) Gooding ................................: 2 (D) - - Idaho ..................................: 13 25 - - Jefferson ..............................: 19 56 9 17 Jerome .................................: 6 8 1 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 35 100 5 21 Latah ..................................: 15 52 1 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 15 28 - - Lewis ..................................: 2 (D) - - : Lincoln ................................: 6 18 - - Madison ................................: 3 9 - - Minidoka ...............................: 9 14 - - Nez Perce ..............................: 8 30 - - Oneida .................................: 7 18 - - Owyhee .................................: 2 (D) - - Payette ................................: 16 282 - - Shoshone ...............................: 6 10 - - Teton ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 18 28 1 (D) : Valley .................................: 2 (D) - - Washington .............................: 9 19 3 3 : OTHER POULTRY : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 1 (D) - - 2017: 32 339 1 (D) : Counties, 2022 : : Cassia .................................: 1 (D) - - : POULTRY HATCHED : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: (X) (X) 528 (D) 2017: (X) (X) 535 28,569,633 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: (X) (X) 27 318 Adams ..................................: (X) (X) 4 12 Bannock ................................: (X) (X) 32 412 Benewah ................................: (X) (X) 15 300 Bingham ................................: (X) (X) 20 364 Blaine .................................: (X) (X) 2 (D) Boise ..................................: (X) (X) 12 276 Bonner .................................: (X) (X) 47 2,726 Bonneville .............................: (X) (X) 16 533 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --continued Table 20. Miscellaneous Poultry - Inventory and Number Sold: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Inventory : Sold :------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ POULTRY HATCHED - Con. : : Counties, 2022 - Con. : : Boundary ...............................: (X) (X) 8 700 Butte ..................................: (X) (X) 1 (D) Camas ..................................: (X) (X) 1 (D) Canyon .................................: (X) (X) 60 (D) Caribou ................................: (X) (X) 6 28 Cassia .................................: (X) (X) 5 (D) Clearwater .............................: (X) (X) 3 (D) Custer .................................: (X) (X) 5 252 Elmore .................................: (X) (X) 2 (D) Franklin ...............................: (X) (X) 22 307 : Fremont ................................: (X) (X) 12 366 Gem ....................................: (X) (X) 36 342 Gooding ................................: (X) (X) 5 (D) Idaho ..................................: (X) (X) 10 90 Jefferson ..............................: (X) (X) 17 268 Jerome .................................: (X) (X) 3 (D) Kootenai ...............................: (X) (X) 34 944 Latah ..................................: (X) (X) 26 328 Lemhi ..................................: (X) (X) 10 63 Lincoln ................................: (X) (X) 5 92 : Madison ................................: (X) (X) 4 214 Minidoka ...............................: (X) (X) 7 228 Nez Perce ..............................: (X) (X) 10 491 Oneida .................................: (X) (X) 7 54 Owyhee .................................: (X) (X) 4 50 Payette ................................: (X) (X) 13 (D) Power ..................................: (X) (X) 1 (D) Teton ..................................: (X) (X) 7 834 Twin Falls .............................: (X) (X) 13 184 Valley .................................: (X) (X) 5 78 Washington .............................: (X) (X) 11 87 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 21. Colonies of Honey Bees - Inventory and Honey Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Colonies inventory : Honey collected 1/ : Honey sales :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Pounds : Farms : ($1,000) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 669 154,589 394 5,762,856 220 13,793 2017: 564 130,998 327 4,481,733 195 8,571 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 35 12,999 18 1,009,215 16 2,685 Adams ..................................: 3 8 1 (D) 1 (D) Bannock ................................: 44 (D) 26 (D) 12 (D) Bear Lake ..............................: 3 4 2 (D) - - Benewah ................................: 4 7 3 120 3 (Z) Bingham ................................: 31 20,570 18 923,303 10 2,459 Blaine .................................: 10 (D) 5 (D) 5 (D) Boise ..................................: 11 147 11 3,420 6 4 Bonner .................................: 36 88 24 2,105 12 4 Bonneville .............................: 28 8,056 12 96,980 6 257 : Boundary ...............................: 5 116 4 (D) 2 (D) Butte ..................................: 3 8 2 (D) 1 (D) Canyon .................................: 79 34,062 42 957,617 23 2,541 Caribou ................................: 8 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Cassia .................................: 17 5,492 5 (D) 1 (D) Clearwater .............................: 8 34 7 680 1 (D) Elmore .................................: 15 43 14 812 9 1 Franklin ...............................: 17 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Fremont ................................: 4 6 2 (D) 2 (D) Gem ....................................: 28 229 16 1,590 7 4 : Gooding ................................: 11 11,311 7 367,987 5 705 Idaho ..................................: 25 (D) 11 (D) 9 (D) Jefferson ..............................: 15 2,535 9 16,610 7 25 Jerome .................................: 14 48 6 120 - - Kootenai ...............................: 69 347 47 7,593 12 6 Latah ..................................: 24 419 14 (D) 5 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 8 3,525 4 4,130 4 11 Lewis ..................................: 1 (D) - - - - Lincoln ................................: 2 (D) - - - - Madison ................................: 8 8,096 8 125,230 6 297 : Minidoka ...............................: 2 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Nez Perce ..............................: 16 (D) 10 (D) 1 (D) Oneida .................................: 4 10 2 (D) 2 (D) Owyhee .................................: 15 9,063 7 236,790 7 761 Payette ................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 4 1,361 Power ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 6 12 6 480 6 1 Teton ..................................: 10 26 7 630 5 1 Twin Falls .............................: 36 (D) 21 (D) 11 (D) Valley .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Washington .............................: 7 3,967 7 123,938 7 307 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 22. Aquaculture Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Value ($1,000) :: Geographic area : Farms : Value ($1,000) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CATFISH : :: OTHER FOOD FISH - Con. : : :: : State Total : :: Counties, 2022 - Con. : : :: : Idaho ........................................2022: 1 (D) :: Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) 2017: 2 (D) :: Custer ...........................................: 2 (D) : :: Gooding ..........................................: 1 (D) Counties, 2022 : :: Idaho ............................................: 5 8,683 : :: Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) :: Nez Perce ........................................: 3 431 : :: Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) TROUT : :: Valley ...........................................: 1 (D) : :: : State Total : :: CRUSTACEANS : : :: : Idaho ........................................2022: 29 56,475 :: State Total : 2017: 41 88,834 :: : : :: Idaho ........................................2022: - - Counties, 2022 : :: 2017: 1 (D) : :: : Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) :: ORNAMENTAL FISH : Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) :: : Bonner ...........................................: 1 (D) :: State Total : Canyon ...........................................: 1 (D) :: : Caribou ..........................................: 3 (D) :: Idaho ........................................2022: - - Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) :: 2017: 1 (D) Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) :: : Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) :: SPORT OR GAME FISH : Fremont ..........................................: 1 (D) :: : Gooding ..........................................: 8 6,990 :: State Total : : :: : Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) :: Idaho ........................................2022: 3 (D) Power ............................................: 1 (D) :: 2017: 7 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: 7 43,514 :: : Valley ...........................................: 1 (D) :: Counties, 2022 : : :: : OTHER FOOD FISH : :: Gooding ..........................................: 2 (D) : :: Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) State Total : :: : : :: OTHER AQUACULTURE PRODUCTS : Idaho ........................................2022: 24 18,583 :: : 2017: 22 7,965 :: State Total : : :: : Counties, 2022 : :: Idaho ........................................2022: 1 (D) : :: 2017: 2 (D) Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) :: : Bingham ..........................................: 4 (D) :: Counties, 2022 : Bonner ...........................................: 1 (D) :: : Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) :: Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) :: : --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALPACAS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 127 1,304 18 119 129 2017: 151 1,607 20 141 206 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 5 27 - - - Bannock ................................: 14 77 - - - Benewah ................................: 2 (D) - - - Boise ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Bonner .................................: 13 212 1 (D) (D) Bonneville .............................: 3 7 - - - Boundary ...............................: 3 12 - - - Canyon .................................: 19 284 4 24 34 Cassia .................................: 6 16 - - - Elmore .................................: 1 (D) - - - : Franklin ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Fremont ................................: 2 (D) - - - Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Jefferson ..............................: 6 28 5 30 6 Jerome .................................: 4 28 - - - Kootenai ...............................: 7 56 2 (D) (D) Latah ..................................: 8 106 2 (D) (D) Lewis ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Nez Perce ..............................: 5 53 - - - Oneida .................................: 3 9 - - - : Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) - - - Payette ................................: 2 (D) - - - Power ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Twin Falls .............................: 11 64 1 (D) (D) Washington .............................: 3 36 - - - : BISON : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 42 5,361 20 1,217 2,418 2017: 50 18,634 24 4,699 9,411 : Counties, 2022 : : Benewah ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Bingham ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Bonner .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Bonneville .............................: 4 48 - - - Camas ..................................: 1 (D) - - - Canyon .................................: 7 16 - - - Clark ..................................: 3 750 3 12 30 Elmore .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Franklin ...............................: 4 186 2 (D) (D) Fremont ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) : Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Jerome .................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) (D) Kootenai ...............................: 3 66 - - - Oneida .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) - - - Payette ................................: 3 18 3 12 24 Twin Falls .............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) : DEER IN CAPTIVITY : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 5 231 3 6 3 2017: 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) : Counties, 2022 : : Valley .................................: 5 231 3 6 3 : ELK IN CAPTIVITY : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 16 2,517 12 436 872 2017: 15 2,427 14 380 1,476 : Counties, 2022 : : Bingham ................................: 1 (D) - - - Boise ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Bonner .................................: 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) Bonneville .............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) Boundary ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Elmore .................................: 1 (D) - - - Franklin ...............................: 1 (D) - - - Fremont ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Kootenai ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) : Lincoln ................................: - - 2 (D) (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ELK IN CAPTIVITY - Con. : : Counties, 2022 - Con. : : Power ..................................: 3 153 - - - Shoshone ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) : LLAMAS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 125 735 15 39 31 2017: 166 819 10 25 23 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 7 68 2 (D) (D) Adams ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Bannock ................................: 15 19 2 (D) (D) Bear Lake ..............................: 1 (D) - - - Bingham ................................: 6 46 - - - Bonner .................................: 4 8 - - - Bonneville .............................: 9 (D) 4 21 20 Canyon .................................: 22 146 2 (D) (D) Cassia .................................: 6 15 - - - Franklin ...............................: 2 (D) - - - : Fremont ................................: 1 (D) - - - Gem ....................................: 4 12 - - - Jerome .................................: 7 18 - - - Kootenai ...............................: 12 20 1 (D) (D) Latah ..................................: 6 8 - - - Lemhi ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Lincoln ................................: 1 (D) - - - Minidoka ...............................: 3 15 1 (D) (D) Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) - - - Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) : Payette ................................: 7 27 2 (D) (D) Power ..................................: 1 (D) - - - Teton ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Twin Falls .............................: 2 (D) - - - Valley .................................: 1 (D) - - - : RABBITS, LIVE : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 80 1,381 33 1,769 38 2017: 89 1,552 40 3,255 51 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 4 100 - - - Bingham ................................: 2 (D) - - - Bonner .................................: 19 138 10 58 2 Bonneville .............................: 8 78 4 16 (Z) Canyon .................................: 8 115 5 42 1 Caribou ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Clearwater .............................: 2 (D) - - - Franklin ...............................: 7 68 - - - Fremont ................................: 2 (D) - - - Jefferson ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) : Kootenai ...............................: 5 84 1 (D) (D) Latah ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) Lemhi ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Owyhee .................................: 2 (D) - - - Payette ................................: 1 (D) - - - Teton ..................................: 2 (D) - - - Twin Falls .............................: 7 366 6 240 5 Valley .................................: 2 (D) - - - : EQUINE PRODUCTS : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: (NA) (NA) 149 (X) 1,239 2017: (NA) (NA) 202 (X) 1,169 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: (NA) (NA) 7 (X) 18 Bannock ................................: (NA) (NA) 8 (X) 33 Bear Lake ..............................: (NA) (NA) 6 (X) 9 Bingham ................................: (NA) (NA) 11 (X) 8 Blaine .................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Bonner .................................: (NA) (NA) 8 (X) 10 Bonneville .............................: (NA) (NA) 15 (X) 96 Boundary ...............................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Canyon .................................: (NA) (NA) 12 (X) (D) Cassia .................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 15 : Clearwater .............................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Custer .................................: (NA) (NA) 6 (X) 24 Elmore .................................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Franklin ...............................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 5 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 23. Miscellaneous Livestock and Animal Specialties - Inventory and Sales: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Inventory : Sales :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : : : Value Geographic area : Farms : Number : Farms : Number : ($1,000) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- EQUINE PRODUCTS - Con. : : Counties, 2022 - Con. : : Fremont ................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 5 Gem ....................................: (NA) (NA) 7 (X) 20 Jefferson ..............................: (NA) (NA) 5 (X) 13 Kootenai ...............................: (NA) (NA) 5 (X) 21 Latah ..................................: (NA) (NA) 8 (X) 20 Lemhi ..................................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Madison ................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 10 Oneida .................................: (NA) (NA) 5 (X) 10 Owyhee .................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 26 Payette ................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 28 : Power ..................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Teton ..................................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Twin Falls .............................: (NA) (NA) 12 (X) 14 Valley .................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 1 : OTHER LIVESTOCK : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: 22 (X) 27 (X) (D) 2017: 37 (X) 18 (X) 2,292 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: 2 (X) - (X) - Bingham ................................: 1 (X) 1 (X) (D) Bonner .................................: 1 (X) - (X) - Bonneville .............................: - (X) 3 (X) (Z) Canyon .................................: 2 (X) 5 (X) (D) Caribou ................................: 1 (X) - (X) - Elmore .................................: - (X) 3 (X) (Z) Franklin ...............................: 6 (X) 6 (X) (Z) Gem ....................................: 2 (X) 6 (X) (Z) Idaho ..................................: 4 (X) - (X) - : Jefferson ..............................: 2 (X) - (X) - Latah ..................................: - (X) 1 (X) (D) Madison ................................: 1 (X) - (X) - Oneida .................................: - (X) 2 (X) (D) : OTHER LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS 1/ : : State Total : : Idaho ..............................2022: (NA) (NA) 103 (X) 4,639 2017: (NA) (NA) 89 (X) 13,938 : Counties, 2022 : : Ada ....................................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Adams ..................................: (NA) (NA) - (X) (D) Bannock ................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) (Z) Bingham ................................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Bonner .................................: (NA) (NA) 13 (X) 4 Bonneville .............................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Canyon .................................: (NA) (NA) 10 (X) 161 Caribou ................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) (D) Cassia .................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 816 Clearwater .............................: (NA) (NA) - (X) 1 : Elmore .................................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Franklin ...............................: (NA) (NA) 11 (X) 1,770 Fremont ................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Gem ....................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 1 Gooding ................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 39 Idaho ..................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Jefferson ..............................: (NA) (NA) 1 (X) (D) Jerome .................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) 19 Kootenai ...............................: (NA) (NA) 11 (X) 1 Latah ..................................: (NA) (NA) 6 (X) 11 : Madison ................................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Minidoka ...............................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Oneida .................................: (NA) (NA) 3 (X) 4 Payette ................................: (NA) (NA) - (X) (D) Power ..................................: (NA) (NA) 7 (X) 1 Twin Falls .............................: (NA) (NA) 2 (X) (D) Valley .................................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 3 Washington .............................: (NA) (NA) 4 (X) 4 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 13,037 662 119 471 256 129 561 acres: 4,370,363 32,982 14,039 60,578 61,633 58,997 323,793 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 10,389 662 109 380 230 14 558 acres: 2,904,105 31,519 10,938 25,315 35,081 35 317,233 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 1,322 4 - 12 20 4 56 acres: 538,586 104 - 2,060 3,633 588 23,025 bushels: 50,782,418 10,778 - 133,980 208,857 24,136 2,637,136 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,013 4 - 7 11 - 52 acres: 348,967 104 - 774 1,345 - 21,215 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 146 2 - 1 1 - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 322 2 - 7 9 2 9 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 323 - - 1 2 2 13 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 243 - - 2 7 - 19 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 155 - - 1 1 - 5 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 133 - - - - - 9 : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 648 17 1 - 7 - 5 acres: 126,508 3,130 (D) - 117 - 2,386 bushels: 22,937,258 728,992 (D) - 17,402 - 397,069 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 648 17 1 - 7 - 5 acres: 126,508 3,130 (D) - 117 - 2,386 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 147 3 1 - 5 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 216 5 - - 2 - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 153 5 - - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 77 3 - - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 34 1 - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 21 - - - - - 1 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 772 17 1 1 - - 24 acres: 258,326 6,446 (D) (D) - - 7,238 tons: 7,412,427 186,938 (D) (D) - - 184,454 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 770 17 1 1 - - 24 acres: (D) 6,446 (D) (D) - - 7,238 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 97 1 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 238 2 1 - - - 11 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 210 3 - 1 - - 6 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 97 7 - - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 64 3 - - - - 5 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 66 1 - - - - 1 : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ................................................farms: 227 3 - - - - 1 acres: 35,063 347 - - - - (D) cwt: 868,671 7,298 - - - - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 213 3 - - - - 1 acres: 31,511 347 - - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 37 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 92 2 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 62 1 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 22 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 11 - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 3 - - - - - 1 : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ..............................farms: 10,279 529 107 372 246 87 459 acres: 1,415,865 14,184 13,962 28,017 50,840 11,059 80,538 tons, dry equivalent: 5,361,120 60,941 29,084 76,716 80,847 31,671 327,927 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 8,042 529 95 293 221 1 458 acres: 1,102,400 13,964 10,862 17,963 33,538 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4,884 458 40 218 72 41 190 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 2,460 44 34 77 63 25 103 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1,560 16 17 55 47 11 61 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 703 7 12 8 31 5 57 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 417 2 2 11 23 4 33 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 255 2 2 3 10 1 15 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 115 - - 1 - 2 5 acres: 11,088 - - (D) - (D) 171 bushels: 704,503 - - (D) - (D) 15,910 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 41 - - 1 - - 5 acres: 4,324 - - (D) - - 141 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 22 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 60 - - 1 - 2 5 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 27 - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 3 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 3 - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: 5 - - - - - - acres: 485 - - - - - - bushels: 52,100 - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 4 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: 8 - - - - - - acres: 304 - - - - - - bushels: 9,092 - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 144 45 413 531 212 106 82 acres: 52,396 (D) 18,710 186,338 42,455 57,766 77,542 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 144 41 131 487 52 106 41 acres: 52,089 719 781 125,797 2,429 57,613 25,774 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 17 - 4 91 12 21 26 acres: 15,386 - 240 60,907 2,222 3,981 9,389 bushels: 1,896,718 - 24,653 5,088,059 227,755 333,140 462,030 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 17 - - 85 - 20 19 acres: 15,386 - - 44,347 - (D) 4,230 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 1 14 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 1 - 3 15 1 9 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 4 - - 23 10 6 5 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 10 1 5 12 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 15 - 1 4 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 10 - - 14 - - 1 : Corn for grain ............................................farms: - - - 9 2 7 1 acres: - - - 1,064 (D) 982 (D) bushels: - - - 212,914 (D) 108,200 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 9 2 7 1 acres: - - - 1,064 (D) 982 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 3 2 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 5 - 7 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - 1 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: - - - 11 - 4 3 acres: - - - 5,876 - 252 940 tons: - - - 112,298 - 5,134 28,760 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 11 - 4 1 acres: - - - 5,876 - 252 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - 2 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 1 - 3 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 4 - 1 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 3 - - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ................................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - cwt: - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ..............................farms: 129 30 326 404 146 94 76 acres: 33,196 802 17,259 46,574 12,005 42,027 57,723 tons, dry equivalent: 126,296 2,833 24,482 164,441 33,826 190,534 92,095 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 129 26 36 368 6 94 34 acres: 33,196 687 592 35,411 212 42,027 17,257 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 54 23 181 238 67 8 6 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 14 5 108 66 45 17 18 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 20 2 28 56 20 33 10 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 16 - 3 20 13 8 9 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 22 - 4 14 1 15 17 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 3 - 2 10 - 13 16 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: - - 4 3 8 - 2 acres: - - 275 (D) 289 - (D) bushels: - - 7,994 (D) 28,359 - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - 2 acres: - - - - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 1 2 3 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 1 - 5 - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - 2 1 - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 1,166 212 348 34 146 138 128 acres: 203,509 144,142 294,586 53,344 11,318 30,101 80,780 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,166 158 341 27 16 138 128 acres: 193,077 48,152 268,475 44,545 (D) 29,531 73,699 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 29 65 53 5 1 5 5 acres: 1,043 53,200 30,028 4,799 (D) 610 2,350 bushels: 145,290 2,890,386 4,260,740 354,256 (D) 50,200 62,400 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 29 36 53 5 - 5 5 acres: 1,043 9,439 30,028 4,799 - 610 2,350 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 21 2 12 - 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 4 9 8 - - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 4 13 6 - - 5 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 12 8 1 - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 14 12 3 - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 15 7 1 - - 1 : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 169 1 13 1 - - 15 acres: 23,758 (D) 1,843 (D) - - 7,377 bushels: 4,761,399 (D) 300,855 (D) - - 1,114,538 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 169 1 13 1 - - 15 acres: 23,758 (D) 1,843 (D) - - 7,377 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 52 - 2 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 53 - 5 - - - 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 41 - 3 - - - 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 15 - 2 1 - - 4 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 6 1 1 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 - - - - - 4 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 119 3 64 4 - 2 10 acres: 23,669 309 38,193 1,518 - (D) 8,473 tons: 657,566 6,843 1,169,603 27,196 - (D) 252,054 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 119 3 64 4 - 2 10 acres: 23,669 309 38,193 1,518 - (D) 8,473 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 34 1 - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 40 - 15 - - 2 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 21 2 25 2 - - 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 10 - 2 1 - - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 6 - 6 1 - - 2 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 8 - 16 - - - 2 : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ................................................farms: 28 - 20 - - - 8 acres: 2,991 - 4,847 - - - 1,073 cwt: 81,403 - 118,331 - - - 27,979 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 28 - 20 - - - 8 acres: 2,991 - 4,847 - - - 1,073 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4 - - - - - 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 13 - 6 - - - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 8 - 9 - - - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 3 - 1 - - - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - 4 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ..............................farms: 846 163 274 33 122 137 121 acres: 47,739 31,988 73,373 38,627 7,651 29,267 39,859 tons, dry equivalent: 185,306 75,011 350,057 152,613 14,886 89,814 179,623 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 843 120 272 26 - 137 119 acres: 46,652 18,998 (D) 35,663 - 28,697 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 576 36 78 - 61 44 57 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 184 36 69 5 42 26 12 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 55 48 64 10 16 28 23 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 13 26 24 3 - 17 10 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 9 15 19 5 1 17 11 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 9 2 20 10 2 5 8 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 3 9 11 - - - 2 acres: (D) 2,046 839 - - - (D) bushels: (D) 139,768 84,133 - - - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 3 - 11 - - - 2 acres: (D) - 839 - - - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 1 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 1 6 10 - - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 1 1 1 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - 1 - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 1 - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 4 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - bushels: 3,825 - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 466 291 432 290 435 454 276 465 acres: 74,567 165,603 19,873 125,314 123,368 171,192 132,964 36,706 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 393 252 425 290 50 450 276 202 acres: 48,335 89,163 19,324 124,381 1,059 138,768 132,147 5,655 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 45 103 5 38 32 91 74 5 acres: 3,179 74,679 602 7,241 3,864 39,633 21,926 795 bushels: 230,241 6,627,560 82,651 977,690 222,154 3,622,584 3,125,685 41,360 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 30 75 5 38 - 72 74 1 acres: 2,085 38,767 602 7,241 - 23,643 21,926 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 15 9 2 8 2 10 5 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 18 16 2 9 14 19 20 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 7 23 - 7 14 21 21 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 5 16 1 13 1 18 14 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 12 - - 1 16 11 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - 27 - 1 - 7 3 - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 14 - 31 63 1 14 18 - acres: 929 - 3,254 14,883 (D) 1,801 4,715 - bushels: 140,300 - 611,442 2,809,241 (D) 172,040 821,226 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 14 - 31 63 1 14 18 - acres: 929 - 3,254 14,883 (D) 1,801 4,715 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4 - 9 16 - 5 1 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 7 - 12 25 - 2 10 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 2 - 7 11 - 6 2 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - 2 5 - 1 3 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 3 1 - 1 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - 1 3 - - 1 - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 33 4 8 96 - 27 88 - acres: 5,361 233 417 44,114 - 7,533 25,138 - tons: 129,312 6,291 12,202 1,377,743 - 173,987 784,053 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 33 4 8 96 - 27 88 - acres: 5,361 233 417 44,114 - 7,533 25,138 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 2 - - 9 - 4 6 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 8 4 7 27 - 8 24 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 15 - 1 16 - 9 28 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 8 - - 15 - 1 13 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 16 - 4 13 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 13 - 1 4 - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ................................................farms: 1 - - 1 1 - 27 1 acres: (D) - - (D) (D) - 4,431 (D) cwt: (D) - - (D) (D) - 112,701 (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1 - - 1 - - 27 - acres: (D) - - (D) - - 4,431 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - 1 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 1 1 - 12 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 10 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - - 2 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ..............................farms: 429 209 336 213 361 401 220 352 acres: 46,244 31,596 11,081 45,541 35,590 76,282 40,045 22,673 tons, dry equivalent: 136,817 107,095 40,972 298,784 63,522 380,751 271,731 51,647 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 357 170 329 213 22 401 220 95 acres: 34,497 14,543 10,788 45,541 218 74,840 40,045 5,094 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 200 91 232 62 140 200 59 230 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 105 57 74 66 108 84 52 85 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 73 34 22 34 76 38 61 20 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 23 14 8 21 29 38 33 11 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 23 7 - 21 6 16 8 3 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 5 6 - 9 2 25 7 3 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: - - 1 3 14 1 - 7 acres: - - (D) 420 501 (D) - 545 bushels: - - (D) 63,000 17,920 (D) - 23,942 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 3 - - - - acres: - - (D) 420 - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 6 - - 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - 1 - 7 - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 3 1 - - 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: - - - - - 2 - - acres: - - - - - (D) - - bushels: - - - - - (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 524 166 128 135 273 296 240 261 acres: 177,685 32,381 136,707 50,547 125,298 238,687 164,374 84,770 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 84 165 9 135 268 296 53 192 acres: (D) 30,891 260 49,525 80,324 233,677 299 27,692 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: 41 3 27 19 78 85 20 3 acres: 7,928 386 6,756 3,172 36,614 40,218 4,487 120 bushels: 540,959 37,706 478,628 381,079 2,887,589 5,150,639 333,156 9,300 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 2 - 19 58 85 1 2 acres: - (D) - 3,172 16,593 40,218 (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4 - 1 2 2 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 6 - 9 4 23 18 4 3 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 20 3 6 8 14 19 10 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 8 - 5 4 14 32 4 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3 - 5 1 13 6 2 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - 1 - 12 10 - - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: - - 1 7 1 6 - 3 acres: - - (D) 1,406 (D) 9,019 - (D) bushels: - - (D) 239,971 (D) 1,412,952 - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 7 1 6 - 3 acres: - - (D) 1,406 (D) 9,019 - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 1 - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 2 - - - 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - 1 2 - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 3 - 1 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 4 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 1 - 1 : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: - - - 13 8 15 - 2 acres: - - - 9,211 793 11,907 - (D) tons: - - - 282,504 19,476 292,290 - (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 13 8 15 - 2 acres: - - - 9,211 793 11,907 - (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - 1 2 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 4 3 - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 2 6 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 6 1 - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - 1 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 3 - 3 - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ................................................farms: 5 - 1 2 1 16 4 - acres: 1,262 - (D) (D) (D) 6,039 998 - cwt: 20,205 - (D) (D) (D) 161,813 24,315 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 2 1 16 - - acres: - - - (D) (D) 6,039 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 1 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 1 - 8 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 3 - - 1 1 2 3 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - 2 1 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 1 - 1 - - 1 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 2 - - : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ..............................farms: 336 148 68 114 154 225 132 217 acres: 30,154 31,938 7,797 28,405 14,546 36,478 12,197 37,101 tons, dry equivalent: 79,592 95,879 17,900 141,375 62,151 195,663 23,207 92,086 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 3 147 7 114 147 225 21 172 acres: 39 (D) 92 28,405 13,950 36,478 200 22,324 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 189 50 15 19 55 86 68 67 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 89 25 27 26 48 65 30 59 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 41 35 18 29 37 42 18 55 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 2 22 6 26 10 17 8 18 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 8 9 2 9 3 8 8 14 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 7 7 - 5 1 7 - 4 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 3 - 16 2 1 3 3 - acres: 89 - 2,183 (D) (D) 25 155 - bushels: 3,094 - 102,699 (D) (D) 2,350 4,940 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 2 - 3 - - acres: - - - (D) - 25 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 1 - - - 1 3 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 2 - 1 2 - - 3 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - 14 - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - 1 - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - bushels: - - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: 1 - - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Harvested cropland ........................................farms: 266 336 139 14 161 712 56 318 acres: 109,288 53,527 196,858 (D) 65,452 225,508 4,783 48,753 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 263 336 111 4 141 712 42 311 acres: 101,110 53,493 113,356 (D) 38,910 222,065 3,872 46,749 : Barley for grain ..........................................farms: - 3 10 - 49 151 - 10 acres: - (D) 4,963 - 32,418 35,228 - 730 bushels: - (D) 491,554 - 1,777,302 4,870,718 - 75,636 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - 3 4 - 35 151 - 10 acres: - (D) 2,803 - 15,920 35,228 - 730 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 2 - - 3 22 - 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - 1 - - 14 50 - 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - 3 - 5 45 - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - 3 - 7 16 - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - 3 - 13 12 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - 1 - 7 6 - - : Corn for grain ............................................farms: 60 48 10 - 1 103 - 19 acres: 15,508 5,428 5,423 - (D) 15,650 - 2,666 bushels: 2,877,271 1,126,752 830,460 - (D) 2,923,426 - 535,261 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 60 48 10 - 1 103 - 19 acres: 15,508 5,428 5,423 - (D) 15,650 - 2,666 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 6 18 - - - 18 - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 18 14 1 - 1 45 - 6 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 20 7 2 - - 21 - 7 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 11 8 3 - - 8 - 5 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 2 1 3 - - 9 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 3 - 1 - - 2 - - : Corn for silage or greenchop ..............................farms: 29 30 4 - 1 138 - 13 acres: 11,115 5,733 904 - (D) 41,145 - 874 tons: 247,880 161,485 23,392 - (D) 1,222,347 - 24,430 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 29 30 4 - 1 138 - 13 acres: 11,115 5,733 904 - (D) 41,145 - 874 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 5 7 - - - 20 - 3 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 8 10 2 - - 49 - 7 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 6 8 1 - 1 42 - 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 7 3 - - - 18 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 1 1 1 - - 1 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 1 - - - 8 - - : Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas : and limas ................................................farms: 11 4 3 - - 82 - 7 acres: 1,182 491 1,121 - - 6,599 - 611 cwt: 30,906 9,328 29,700 - - 157,388 - 16,355 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 11 4 1 - - 82 - 7 acres: 1,182 491 (D) - - 6,599 - 611 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - 1 - - - 27 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 6 2 1 - - 33 - 5 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 4 - - - - 15 - 2 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 1 1 - - 6 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - 1 - - 1 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ..............................farms: 223 272 88 11 122 600 48 299 acres: 52,823 23,068 17,318 308 18,801 81,871 3,467 33,851 tons, dry equivalent: 198,424 123,780 84,632 398 38,568 458,293 5,708 103,142 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 220 272 70 - 100 600 36 294 acres: 52,041 23,068 13,379 - 13,381 81,871 2,649 32,903 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 68 147 26 8 35 225 26 138 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 62 71 24 3 40 188 9 70 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 44 34 14 - 20 127 8 60 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 27 7 13 - 21 39 5 23 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 10 12 7 - 4 9 - 5 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 12 1 4 - 2 12 - 3 : Oats for grain ............................................farms: 1 - - - 1 2 5 2 acres: (D) - - - (D) (D) 1,238 (D) bushels: (D) - - - (D) (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1 - - - - 2 3 2 acres: (D) - - - - (D) (D) (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 1 - - - - - - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 1 1 4 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 1 1 - : Sorghum for grain .........................................farms: 1 - - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - - bushels: (D) - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Soybeans for beans ........................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - acres: - - - - - (D) - - bushels: - - - - - (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Soybeans for beans - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................................farms: 5 - - - - - - acres: 205 - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 8 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: 452 6 - 2 - - 23 acres: 178,358 756 - (D) - - 16,259 tons: 6,570,132 27,076 - (D) - - 622,879 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 452 6 - 2 - - 23 acres: 178,358 756 - (D) - - 16,259 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 31 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 97 3 - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 126 2 - - - - 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 98 1 - 2 - - 6 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 63 - - - - - 8 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 37 - - - - - 6 : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: 10 - - - - - - acres: 938 - - - - - - pounds: 1,500,019 - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 9 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 3 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 2 - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 2,210 42 - 34 15 27 141 acres: 1,162,597 6,061 - 26,897 7,024 31,436 136,688 bushels: 93,723,621 707,146 - 1,378,072 203,066 2,087,178 14,704,674 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1,318 37 - 10 3 - 137 acres: 448,708 4,826 - 3,982 68 - 133,616 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 256 15 - 1 3 - 7 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 539 13 - 2 2 4 12 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 480 7 - 18 4 2 31 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 317 1 - 1 4 3 22 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 294 6 - 5 - 8 31 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 324 - - 7 2 10 38 : Vegetables harvested for sale .............................farms: 1,235 53 3 53 7 4 75 acres: 337,060 753 (D) 1,742 5 11 55,374 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 508 46 3 45 7 4 11 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 138 3 - 6 - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 193 1 - 1 - - 7 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 137 3 - - - - 16 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 82 - - - - - 8 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 177 - - 1 - - 33 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 63 - - - - - 5 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 32 - - - - - 9 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 82 - - 1 - - 19 : Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 567 43 8 38 2 7 10 acres: 5,523 94 10 37 (D) 2 20 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 565 43 8 38 2 7 10 acres: (D) 94 10 37 (D) 2 20 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 495 36 8 35 2 7 9 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 57 7 - 3 - - 1 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 10 - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 1 - - - - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 3 - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 1 - - - - - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 1 - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Soybeans for beans - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - - - - 1 - acres: - - - - - (D) - tons: - - - - - (D) - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - 1 - acres: - - - - - (D) - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - 1 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 2 - 4 91 32 20 12 acres: (D) - 242 52,438 15,905 9,017 7,314 bushels: (D) - (D) 3,362,173 1,353,747 974,075 407,885 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 1 - - 65 - 19 5 acres: (D) - - 21,735 - (D) 1,472 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - 1 14 2 1 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 1 - 3 21 4 4 2 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 16 3 7 3 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - 11 6 3 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 11 15 3 6 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - 18 2 2 1 : Vegetables harvested for sale .............................farms: 9 - 42 59 10 5 3 acres: (D) - 37 16,030 6 (D) 2 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 5 - 41 26 10 4 3 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 3 - 1 4 - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - - - 9 - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - 7 - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - - 3 - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 1 - - 10 - 1 - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 1 - - 2 - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - 2 - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - 6 - 1 - : Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 2 5 35 14 26 1 - acres: (D) 5 45 21 31 (D) - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 2 5 35 14 24 1 - acres: (D) 5 44 21 (D) (D) - Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 2 5 32 14 26 1 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: - - 3 - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Soybeans for beans - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 4 - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: 88 - 72 - - - 3 acres: 13,175 - 40,215 - - - 1,708 tons: 504,708 - 1,441,877 - - - 69,920 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 88 - 72 - - - 3 acres: 13,175 - 40,215 - - - 1,708 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 12 - 1 - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 18 - 14 - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 40 - 12 - - - 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 18 - 16 - - - 1 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - 22 - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - 7 - - - 1 : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - pounds: (D) - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 4 - - - - - - acres: (D) - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 4 - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 239 63 112 9 8 7 23 acres: 38,781 43,544 68,041 7,257 2,882 (D) 12,138 bushels: 4,703,118 1,942,439 5,791,969 794,021 176,538 9,185 1,131,189 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 209 19 100 3 - 7 20 acres: 29,611 9,609 46,034 1,422 - (D) 7,800 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 47 1 4 - - 7 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 98 9 26 - 1 - 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 37 13 27 2 1 - 7 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 36 14 16 1 6 - 2 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 19 9 20 4 - - 4 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 17 19 2 - - 4 : Vegetables harvested for sale .............................farms: 190 24 40 - 7 1 9 acres: 22,531 6,688 30,531 - 5 (D) 5,262 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 39 2 8 - 7 1 - 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 39 6 2 - - - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 44 7 2 - - - 2 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 41 - 6 - - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 20 4 2 - - - 2 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 7 5 20 - - - 5 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: 4 1 12 - - - 2 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 2 1 3 - - - 1 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 1 3 5 - - - 2 : Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 90 1 - - 4 2 2 acres: 4,065 (D) - - (D) (D) (D) Irrigated ...............................................farms: 90 1 - - 4 2 2 acres: 4,065 (D) - - (D) (D) (D) Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 66 1 - - 4 1 2 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 17 - - - - 1 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 3 - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 1 - - - - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 2 - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 1 - - - - - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 1 - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Soybeans for beans - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 2 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - 1 16 - - 42 - acres: - - (D) 1,886 - - 17,530 - tons: - - (D) 77,634 - - 694,824 - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - 1 16 - - 42 - acres: - - (D) 1,886 - - 17,530 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 12 - - 9 - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - 1 2 - - 14 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - - 7 - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - 10 - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - 2 - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: - - - - 1 - - - acres: - - - - (D) - - - pounds: - - - - (D) - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - 1 - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 52 70 33 33 111 58 54 13 acres: 11,914 37,174 2,866 7,047 59,237 24,511 8,373 8,183 bushels: 583,025 1,903,986 315,675 632,544 4,159,000 2,279,582 1,102,703 723,436 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 26 48 25 27 - 36 51 - acres: 2,760 13,803 2,616 6,126 - 10,190 7,556 - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 11 7 16 6 10 4 7 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 18 17 4 14 13 8 23 4 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 9 24 12 9 33 20 9 - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 8 6 1 2 16 15 14 3 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 3 9 - 1 20 6 1 2 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 3 7 - 1 19 5 - 2 : Vegetables harvested for sale .............................farms: 11 56 38 27 5 32 27 39 acres: (D) 20,313 654 4,088 5 19,616 10,370 49 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 7 5 27 12 5 19 9 37 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 3 - 7 1 - 1 1 2 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - 23 1 8 - - 9 - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - 11 3 1 - 1 3 - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - 3 - 2 - 3 - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 1 14 - 3 - 8 5 - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - 5 - 1 - 3 - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: 1 2 - 1 - 1 1 - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - 7 - 1 - 4 4 - : Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 16 2 60 9 21 11 1 38 acres: 19 (D) 309 15 23 10 (D) 29 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 16 2 60 9 21 11 1 38 acres: 19 (D) 309 15 23 10 (D) 28 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 15 2 50 9 21 10 1 38 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 1 - 6 - - 1 - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - - 4 - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Soybeans for beans - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 1 - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: - - - 16 - 88 - - acres: - - - 2,369 - 53,439 - - tons: - - - 92,164 - 1,875,462 - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 16 - 88 - - acres: - - - 2,369 - 53,439 - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - 8 - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - 11 - 9 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - 19 - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - 2 - 27 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - 1 - 9 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - 16 - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - pounds: - - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 130 - 78 18 110 38 98 47 acres: 89,496 - 76,391 5,186 45,667 35,897 94,155 31,703 bushels: 7,146,371 - 5,853,644 510,500 3,022,780 3,756,870 7,760,748 1,263,570 Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - 18 88 37 - 6 acres: - - - 4,164 21,781 (D) - 1,910 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 10 - 1 1 4 1 3 - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 19 - 4 10 28 5 7 18 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 14 - 17 2 30 7 34 1 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 17 - 15 - 19 9 15 9 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: 34 - 14 4 12 9 7 9 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 36 - 27 1 17 7 32 10 : Vegetables harvested for sale .............................farms: 32 16 - 2 83 35 15 5 acres: 44 12 - (D) 26,216 45,079 15 (D) Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 29 16 - - 5 4 15 4 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 3 - - - 1 11 - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - - - 1 29 3 - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - - 16 1 - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - - 1 14 2 - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - - - 18 14 - 1 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - 10 5 - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - 3 1 - 1 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - 5 8 - - : Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 22 10 1 - 5 1 14 4 acres: 40 17 (D) - 7 (D) 34 3 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 22 10 1 - 5 1 14 4 acres: 40 16 (D) - 7 (D) 34 3 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 19 9 - - 5 1 11 4 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 3 1 1 - - - 3 - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - - - - - - - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 24. Selected Crops Harvested: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Soybeans for beans - Con. : : Irrigated ...............................................farms: - - - - - 1 - - acres: - - - - - (D) - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: - - - - - 1 - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Sugarbeets for sugar ......................................farms: 18 12 19 - - 39 - 6 acres: 3,390 3,799 13,589 - - 8,343 - 716 tons: 138,829 151,834 472,791 - - 332,595 - 22,939 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 18 12 19 - - 39 - 6 acres: 3,390 3,799 13,589 - - 8,343 - 716 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 3 1 - - - 5 - 1 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 7 2 - - - 11 - 1 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 6 4 6 - - 10 - 4 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - 7 - - 8 - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 5 2 - - 5 - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 1 - 4 - - - - - : Sunflower seed, all .......................................farms: 5 - - - - - - - acres: 787 - - - - - - - pounds: 1,247,519 - - - - - - - Irrigated ...............................................farms: 5 - - - - - - - acres: 787 - - - - - - - Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: - - - - - - - - 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 2 - - - - - - - 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 2 - - - - - - - 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 1 - - - - - - - 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - : Wheat for grain, all ......................................farms: 47 60 68 - 12 166 - 33 acres: 14,926 6,945 102,492 - 7,822 19,625 - 6,857 bushels: 1,247,631 823,962 7,176,291 - 474,569 2,507,738 - 706,401 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 41 59 41 - 6 151 - 23 acres: 7,855 (D) 37,442 - 3,463 16,151 - 5,804 Farms by acres harvested: : 1 to 24 acres ..............................................: 2 9 4 - 1 50 - 2 25 to 99 acres .............................................: 20 31 10 - - 67 - 13 100 to 249 acres ...........................................: 18 10 12 - 3 28 - 10 250 to 499 acres ...........................................: 5 8 7 - 3 13 - 5 500 to 999 acres ...........................................: - 1 8 - 3 7 - 3 1,000 acres or more ........................................: 2 1 27 - 2 1 - - : Vegetables harvested for sale .............................farms: 16 62 27 2 19 74 5 13 acres: (D) 7,247 38,419 (D) 3,321 10,375 (D) 2,109 Farms by acres harvested: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 6 9 3 2 7 16 4 5 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 6 12 - - 4 22 - - 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: 1 25 - - - 17 1 2 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: 1 5 7 - 4 9 - 2 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: 1 8 3 - 2 1 - 3 500.0 acres or more ........................................: 1 3 14 - 2 9 - 1 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - 2 3 - 1 5 - 1 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - 2 - - 1 - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: 1 1 9 - 1 3 - - : Land in orchards ..........................................farms: 2 33 - 4 1 16 - 6 acres: (D) 519 - 4 (D) 75 - 47 Irrigated ...............................................farms: 2 33 - 4 1 16 - 6 acres: (D) 519 - 4 (D) 75 - 47 Farms by bearing and nonbearing acres: : 0.1 to 4.9 acres ...........................................: 1 29 - 4 1 12 - 2 5.0 to 24.9 acres ..........................................: 1 1 - - - 3 - 4 25.0 to 99.9 acres .........................................: - 2 - - - 1 - - 100.0 to 249.9 acres .......................................: - - - - - - - - 250.0 to 499.9 acres .......................................: - 1 - - - - - - 500.0 acres or more ........................................: - - - - - - - - 500.0 to 749.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - - 750.0 to 999.9 acres .....................................: - - - - - - - - 1,000.0 acres or more ....................................: - - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AUSTRIAN WINTER PEAS (CWT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 25 2,954 37,080 1 (D) 29 1,828 22,454 12 450 : Counties : : Benewah ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 6 78 1,200 6 78 Boundary .........................................: 6 270 5,454 - - - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - 4 4 20 - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - 6 372 3,720 6 372 Idaho ............................................: 5 450 6,286 - - - - - - - Latah ............................................: 9 1,750 17,818 - - - - - - - Lewis ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 10 1,065 12,570 - - Oneida ...........................................: - - - - - 3 309 4,944 - - Washington .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : BARLEY FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 1,322 538,586 50,782,418 1,013 348,967 1,669 524,307 50,452,071 1,315 378,475 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 4 104 10,778 4 104 15 690 70,686 15 690 Bannock ..........................................: 12 2,060 133,980 7 774 38 6,553 497,661 21 2,812 Bear Lake ........................................: 20 3,633 208,857 11 1,345 49 8,369 595,625 40 5,540 Benewah ..........................................: 4 588 24,136 - - 12 1,808 70,061 - - Bingham ..........................................: 56 23,025 2,637,136 52 21,215 80 19,764 2,336,235 77 19,056 Blaine ...........................................: 17 15,386 1,896,718 17 15,386 19 8,205 885,940 16 7,664 Bonner ...........................................: 4 240 24,653 - - 13 206 8,502 - - Bonneville .......................................: 91 60,907 5,088,059 85 44,347 133 68,414 6,693,189 115 54,097 Boundary .........................................: 12 2,222 227,755 - - 10 2,333 125,718 1 (D) Butte ............................................: 21 3,981 333,140 20 (D) 45 11,726 1,157,508 44 (D) : Camas ............................................: 26 9,389 462,030 19 4,230 39 8,836 391,952 12 2,614 Canyon ...........................................: 29 1,043 145,290 29 1,043 20 719 45,612 19 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 65 53,200 2,890,386 36 9,439 68 55,247 3,538,789 45 17,719 Cassia ...........................................: 53 30,028 4,260,740 53 30,028 55 33,937 4,445,401 52 29,686 Clark ............................................: 5 4,799 354,256 5 4,799 4 2,615 335,759 4 2,615 Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 (D) (D) - - Custer ...........................................: 5 610 50,200 5 610 16 3,283 340,015 16 3,283 Elmore ...........................................: 5 2,350 62,400 5 2,350 - - - - - Franklin .........................................: 45 3,179 230,241 30 2,085 92 5,870 415,587 76 4,131 Fremont ..........................................: 103 74,679 6,627,560 75 38,767 114 58,565 5,224,941 95 34,883 : Gem ..............................................: 5 602 82,651 5 602 3 543 65,129 2 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 38 7,241 977,690 38 7,241 12 1,579 127,293 12 1,579 Idaho ............................................: 32 3,864 222,154 - - 54 7,228 283,709 1 (D) Jefferson ........................................: 91 39,633 3,622,584 72 23,643 107 40,084 4,042,152 107 34,990 Jerome ...........................................: 74 21,926 3,125,685 74 21,926 49 13,297 1,803,055 49 13,297 Kootenai .........................................: 5 795 41,360 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) - - Latah ............................................: 41 7,928 540,959 - - 25 6,028 249,526 - - Lemhi ............................................: 3 386 37,706 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Lewis ............................................: 27 6,756 478,628 - - 20 3,882 177,406 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 19 3,172 381,079 19 3,172 18 2,935 348,117 17 (D) : Madison ..........................................: 78 36,614 2,887,589 58 16,593 92 37,668 3,710,296 88 32,659 Minidoka .........................................: 85 40,218 5,150,639 85 40,218 129 47,296 6,250,558 129 47,293 Nez Perce ........................................: 20 4,487 333,156 1 (D) 28 6,116 361,312 - - Oneida ...........................................: 3 120 9,300 2 (D) 22 994 57,770 18 702 Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - 6 707 83,002 5 (D) Payette ..........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Power ............................................: 10 4,963 491,554 4 2,803 15 3,476 231,839 10 1,683 Teton ............................................: 49 32,418 1,777,302 35 15,920 69 28,706 2,381,571 46 19,717 Twin Falls .......................................: 151 35,228 4,870,718 151 35,228 170 24,825 2,983,634 170 24,822 Washington .......................................: 10 730 75,636 10 730 18 933 64,797 9 407 : BUCKWHEAT (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: - - - - - 8 777 26,480 7 (D) : Counties : : Gem ..............................................: - - - - - 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) Idaho ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Lewis ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : CAMELINA (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 6 162 324,000 6 162 - - - - - : Counties : : Owyhee ...........................................: 6 162 324,000 6 162 - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CANOLA (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 179 60,905 100,727,242 22 3,148 87 20,759 37,360,350 12 1,488 : Counties : : Benewah ..........................................: 3 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 378 600,000 3 378 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Bonneville .......................................: 6 866 1,634,460 4 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Boundary .........................................: 20 7,240 14,253,127 - - 11 3,256 4,744,382 - - Caribou ..........................................: 6 781 1,077,963 4 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Clearwater .......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: 3 1,050 1,050,000 3 948 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Idaho ............................................: 36 11,543 19,800,049 - - 21 5,980 13,110,017 - - Jefferson ........................................: 4 600 300,000 4 600 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Kootenai .........................................: 6 876 1,155,676 4 (D) 3 319 290,805 1 (D) : Latah ............................................: 31 11,210 18,222,521 - - 5 687 997,084 - - Lewis ............................................: 23 12,426 18,958,519 - - 15 3,994 8,261,976 - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 36 13,352 22,966,874 - - 15 4,598 5,939,961 - - Oneida ...........................................: - - - - - 3 153 385,050 - - Power ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Teton ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : CHICKPEAS, ALL (CWT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 146 61,066 828,426 3 261 244 117,935 1,507,137 13 1,146 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Benewah ..........................................: 7 5,760 72,830 - - 10 3,242 36,515 - - Bingham ..........................................: - - - - - 3 542 6,448 3 542 Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 5 995 18,220 - - Canyon ...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 979 13,065 - - Elmore ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Idaho ............................................: 8 1,411 31,961 - - 11 2,683 38,146 - - : Kootenai .........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 3 (D) (D) - - Latah ............................................: 56 21,954 306,445 - - 98 44,531 624,935 - - Lewis ............................................: 24 9,859 126,592 - - 25 14,995 137,467 - - Lincoln ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Madison ..........................................: - - - - - 3 37 751 3 29 Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Nez Perce ........................................: 42 18,808 247,364 - - 72 44,982 561,845 - - Power ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) - - : CORN FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 648 126,508 22,937,258 648 126,508 713 143,263 27,925,762 713 143,263 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 17 3,130 728,992 17 3,130 32 4,844 1,110,024 32 4,844 Adams ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Bannock ..........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Bear Lake ........................................: 7 117 17,402 7 117 - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 5 2,386 397,069 5 2,386 9 2,863 503,542 9 2,863 Bonneville .......................................: 9 1,064 212,914 9 1,064 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Boundary .........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Butte ............................................: 7 982 108,200 7 982 - - - - - Camas ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Canyon ...........................................: 169 23,758 4,761,399 169 23,758 155 21,012 4,129,839 155 21,012 : Caribou ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Cassia ...........................................: 13 1,843 300,855 13 1,843 11 3,364 654,340 11 3,364 Clark ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Elmore ...........................................: 15 7,377 1,114,538 15 7,377 19 15,296 2,945,693 19 15,296 Franklin .........................................: 14 929 140,300 14 929 24 2,318 417,191 24 2,318 Gem ..............................................: 31 3,254 611,442 31 3,254 48 3,931 767,377 48 3,931 Gooding ..........................................: 63 14,883 2,809,241 63 14,883 46 12,533 2,449,450 46 12,533 Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 14 1,801 172,040 14 1,801 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Jerome ...........................................: 18 4,715 821,226 18 4,715 21 3,608 815,180 21 3,608 : Lewis ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Lincoln ..........................................: 7 1,406 239,971 7 1,406 21 5,017 1,077,253 21 5,017 Madison ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Minidoka .........................................: 6 9,019 1,412,952 6 9,019 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Oneida ...........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 60 15,508 2,877,271 60 15,508 68 16,476 3,441,771 68 16,476 Payette ..........................................: 48 5,428 1,126,752 48 5,428 46 5,782 1,286,519 46 5,782 Power ............................................: 10 5,423 830,460 10 5,423 16 11,643 2,227,106 16 11,643 Teton ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Twin Falls .......................................: 103 15,650 2,923,426 103 15,650 159 18,252 3,604,042 159 18,252 Washington .......................................: 19 2,666 535,261 19 2,666 25 2,256 496,412 25 2,256 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DRY EDIBLE BEANS, EXCLUDING : CHICKPEAS AND LIMAS (CWT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 227 35,063 868,671 213 31,511 506 69,020 1,757,790 471 59,821 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 3 347 7,298 3 347 9 576 18,468 9 534 Benewah ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Canyon ...........................................: 28 2,991 81,403 28 2,991 111 9,734 241,173 98 8,554 Cassia ...........................................: 20 4,847 118,331 20 4,847 37 10,363 262,329 35 (D) Elmore ...........................................: 8 1,073 27,979 8 1,073 6 3,013 74,460 3 2,303 Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 7 763 17,088 7 763 Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Jerome ...........................................: 27 4,431 112,701 27 4,431 45 8,285 234,368 45 8,285 Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Latah ............................................: 5 1,262 20,205 - - - - - - - Lewis ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 7 3,262 72,976 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Madison ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: 16 6,039 161,813 16 6,039 29 4,471 107,469 29 4,415 Nez Perce ........................................: 4 998 24,315 - - 5 1,661 30,448 - - Owyhee ...........................................: 11 1,182 30,906 11 1,182 20 2,370 62,028 17 2,254 Payette ..........................................: 4 491 9,328 4 491 11 1,121 32,818 11 1,115 : Power ............................................: 3 1,121 29,700 1 (D) - - - - - Twin Falls .......................................: 82 6,599 157,388 82 6,599 206 20,794 545,300 206 20,588 Washington .......................................: 7 611 16,355 7 611 6 1,392 36,348 6 1,392 : DRY EDIBLE PEAS (CWT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 155 27,382 582,714 53 3,866 115 15,171 286,636 52 3,810 : Counties : : Benewah ..........................................: 3 216 1,442 - - 8 1,061 13,464 - - Blaine ...........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Bonneville .......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 6 562 23,713 5 (D) Boundary .........................................: 3 495 19,101 - - 1 (D) (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 15 806 19,845 15 806 21 1,492 34,865 20 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: 3 300 13,467 3 300 6 236 8,845 4 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : Idaho ............................................: 4 1,237 20,055 - - 3 346 4,657 - - Jefferson ........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Kootenai .........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Latah ............................................: 25 4,068 84,727 - - 15 3,062 44,227 - - Lewis ............................................: 11 2,609 55,490 - - 8 1,811 27,400 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 325 7,606 3 325 Nez Perce ........................................: 47 11,987 252,257 - - 15 3,294 52,210 - - Oneida ...........................................: - - - - - 3 309 4,023 - - : Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Power ............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: 26 1,840 47,638 26 1,840 18 1,263 30,182 16 (D) Washington .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : DRY LIMA BEANS (CWT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 4 93 2,232 4 93 10 631 13,071 9 (D) : Counties : : Canyon ...........................................: 4 93 2,232 4 93 10 631 13,071 9 (D) : EMMER AND SPELT (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 4 776 67,497 4 776 1 (D) (D) - - : Counties : : Canyon ...........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Clark ............................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - Lincoln ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FLAXSEED (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 9 1,188 10,406 6 272 12 2,003 58,436 6 (D) : Counties : : Bingham ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 5 (D) 350 5 (D) - - - - - Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Lewis ............................................: - - - - - 3 225 11,250 - - Madison ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Power ............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : HEMP FOR FIBER (POUNDS) : (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : LENTILS (CWT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 54 13,727 87,860 - - 105 34,864 343,556 3 70 : Counties : : Benewah ..........................................: 5 2,125 13,097 - - 16 8,955 83,089 - - Clearwater .......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 9 783 (D) - - Idaho ............................................: 3 827 2,142 - - 5 1,859 7,639 - - Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 (D) 7,194 - - Latah ............................................: 24 5,688 38,123 - - 34 10,722 82,714 - - Lewis ............................................: 9 1,706 11,095 - - 19 5,429 96,010 - - Madison ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 (D) (D) 3 70 Nez Perce ........................................: 8 2,933 21,604 - - 16 6,247 59,878 - - Power ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : MUSTARD SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 50 17,040 14,786,665 23 4,029 54 9,724 10,528,781 35 4,096 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 69 79,800 3 69 Bingham ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Blaine ...........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Bonneville .......................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 2,150 2,176,000 - - Canyon ...........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 12 2,068 1,535,177 10 (D) 10 1,511 1,219,995 - - Cassia ...........................................: 3 1,520 2,741,117 3 1,520 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Franklin .........................................: - - - - - 3 249 101,001 3 78 Fremont ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 8 1,602 1,699,946 7 (D) Gooding ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Latah ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 640 355,766 - - Lewis ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 9 1,246 1,854,608 8 (D) Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 12 7,596 5,427,600 - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 4 52 63,591 4 52 8 148 123,788 8 148 Power ............................................: 6 2,440 2,408,706 - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Teton ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : OATS FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 115 11,088 704,503 41 4,324 124 10,416 661,344 59 4,523 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 52 4,150 3 (D) Bear Lake ........................................: - - - - - 4 364 21,938 4 364 Benewah ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 6 192 12,000 - - Bingham ..........................................: 5 171 15,910 5 141 3 32 2,393 2 (D) Bonner ...........................................: 4 275 7,994 - - 7 211 9,355 - - Bonneville .......................................: 3 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) - - Boundary .........................................: 8 289 28,359 - - 7 605 33,041 - - Butte ............................................: - - - - - 4 347 22,172 3 (D) Camas ............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) - - : Canyon ...........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 5 179 19,900 3 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 9 2,046 139,768 - - 6 706 64,361 3 128 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OATS FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Cassia ...........................................: 11 839 84,133 11 839 5 290 20,788 3 (D) Custer ...........................................: - - - - - 3 435 28,524 3 435 Elmore ...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) Franklin .........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 3 420 63,000 3 420 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Idaho ............................................: 14 501 17,920 - - 10 504 24,986 - - Jefferson ........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 5 77 6,092 5 77 Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Kootenai .........................................: 7 545 23,942 - - 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Latah ............................................: 3 89 3,094 - - 3 90 5,400 - - Lewis ............................................: 16 2,183 102,699 - - 3 348 22,382 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Madison ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 28 1,802 1 (D) Minidoka .........................................: 3 25 2,350 3 25 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Nez Perce ........................................: 3 155 4,940 - - 6 1,056 46,139 - - Oneida ...........................................: - - - - - 7 320 23,400 7 320 Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 496 38,529 3 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 123 13,100 3 123 : Valley ...........................................: 5 1,238 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Washington .......................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : POPCORN (POUNDS, SHELLED) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 8 104 184,187 8 104 7 253 495,741 7 253 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) 3 81 225,856 3 81 Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Washington .......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : RAPESEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 5 600 1,106,000 1 (D) 24 3,781 6,453,347 2 (D) : Counties : : Canyon ...........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Idaho ............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Latah ............................................: 3 (D) (D) - - 9 1,789 2,912,644 - - Lewis ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: - - - - - 10 1,391 2,840,159 - - Power ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : RYE FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: - - - - - 4 20 1,070 - - : Counties : : Bonner ...........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - : SAFFLOWER (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 40 22,893 13,294,641 7 1,366 105 19,191 16,411,948 33 684 : Counties : : Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 7 1,595 1,493,948 3 150 Caribou ..........................................: 4 (D) (D) 1 (D) 7 913 1,341,540 - - Cassia ...........................................: 4 2,324 986,849 1 (D) 9 1,200 870,000 - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - 3 255 68,010 - - Franklin .........................................: 10 4,478 2,680,484 4 722 50 6,246 3,772,370 24 414 Idaho ............................................: 6 4,500 1,500,000 - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 5 1,396 1,048,523 - - 21 1,404 955,080 6 120 Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Power ............................................: 9 8,362 6,029,540 1 (D) 8 7,578 7,911,000 - - : SORGHUM FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 5 485 52,100 4 (D) 6 469 43,610 5 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SORGHUM FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Canyon ...........................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) (D) 3 (D) Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : SOYBEANS FOR BEANS : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 8 304 9,092 5 205 2 (D) (D) - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 4 (D) 3,825 4 (D) - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Latah ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : SUGARBEETS FOR SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 4 252 400,000 4 252 5 11 5,900 5 11 : Counties : : Canyon ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Cassia ...........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - : SUGARBEETS FOR SUGAR : (TONS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 452 178,358 6,570,132 452 178,358 460 168,376 6,521,838 460 168,376 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 6 756 27,076 6 756 9 1,497 61,635 9 1,497 Bannock ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 23 16,259 622,879 23 16,259 28 21,872 863,742 28 21,872 Butte ............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 88 13,175 504,708 88 13,175 81 10,862 433,069 81 10,862 Cassia ...........................................: 72 40,215 1,441,877 72 40,215 67 32,764 1,243,574 67 32,764 Elmore ...........................................: 3 1,708 69,920 3 1,708 11 9,252 349,865 11 9,252 Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 6 598 21,570 6 598 Gooding ..........................................: 16 1,886 77,634 16 1,886 5 772 31,801 5 772 Jerome ...........................................: 42 17,530 694,824 42 17,530 31 8,859 362,006 31 8,859 : Lincoln ..........................................: 16 2,369 92,164 16 2,369 11 3,121 101,188 11 3,121 Minidoka .........................................: 88 53,439 1,875,462 88 53,439 110 50,351 1,939,697 110 50,351 Owyhee ...........................................: 18 3,390 138,829 18 3,390 14 2,455 96,951 14 2,455 Payette ..........................................: 12 3,799 151,834 12 3,799 20 2,729 107,830 20 2,729 Power ............................................: 19 13,589 472,791 19 13,589 21 15,234 587,456 21 15,234 Twin Falls .......................................: 39 8,343 332,595 39 8,343 32 7,165 290,101 32 7,165 Washington .......................................: 6 716 22,939 6 716 14 845 31,353 14 845 : SUNFLOWER SEED, ALL : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 10 938 1,500,019 9 (D) 3 (D) 454,518 1 (D) : Counties : : Boundary .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: 5 787 1,247,519 5 787 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : SUNFLOWER SEED, OIL VARIETIES : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 9 (D) (D) 9 (D) 3 (D) 454,518 1 (D) : Counties : : Boundary .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: 5 787 1,247,519 5 787 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUNFLOWER SEED, NON-OIL : VARIETIES (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Counties : : Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : TRITICALE FOR GRAIN (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 26 2,418 211,543 25 (D) 31 2,050 129,954 17 931 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Bannock ..........................................: - - - - - 5 162 7,344 2 (D) Bear Lake ........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Bonneville .......................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 4 155 12,880 4 155 12 1,115 79,559 4 205 Elmore ...........................................: 3 551 37,370 3 551 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Gem ..............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 3 221 16,760 3 221 4 230 16,826 4 230 Idaho ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - : Jerome ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Payette ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: 5 993 100,461 5 993 - - - - - Washington .......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : WHEAT FOR GRAIN, ALL : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 2,210 1,162,597 93,723,621 1,318 448,708 2,585 1,182,797 94,183,336 1,704 550,934 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 42 6,061 707,146 37 4,826 62 9,009 923,576 55 6,965 Adams ............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 34 26,897 1,378,072 10 3,982 55 29,492 1,560,188 12 7,240 Bear Lake ........................................: 15 7,024 203,066 3 68 21 10,864 315,768 6 546 Benewah ..........................................: 27 31,436 2,087,178 - - 32 26,256 1,656,938 - - Bingham ..........................................: 141 136,688 14,704,674 137 133,616 167 135,883 15,108,312 156 127,448 Blaine ...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) 5 1,418 107,524 1 (D) Bonner ...........................................: 4 242 (D) - - 7 507 17,918 - - Bonneville .......................................: 91 52,438 3,362,173 65 21,735 120 49,387 3,457,894 93 22,458 Boundary .........................................: 32 15,905 1,353,747 - - 21 8,378 623,612 - - : Butte ............................................: 20 9,017 974,075 19 (D) 33 9,060 1,040,137 28 7,882 Camas ............................................: 12 7,314 407,885 5 1,472 20 3,686 210,882 6 1,567 Canyon ...........................................: 239 38,781 4,703,118 209 29,611 208 31,647 3,370,626 200 28,970 Caribou ..........................................: 63 43,544 1,942,439 19 9,609 81 53,628 2,690,553 32 11,933 Cassia ...........................................: 112 68,041 5,791,969 100 46,034 107 70,363 6,363,251 91 50,928 Clark ............................................: 9 7,257 794,021 3 1,422 16 7,273 804,045 16 7,273 Clearwater .......................................: 8 2,882 176,538 - - 14 7,835 445,590 - - Custer ...........................................: 7 (D) 9,185 7 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Elmore ...........................................: 23 12,138 1,131,189 20 7,800 19 19,751 1,931,797 14 11,619 Franklin .........................................: 52 11,914 583,025 26 2,760 94 17,560 863,381 57 7,884 : Fremont ..........................................: 70 37,174 1,903,986 48 13,803 76 38,399 2,949,938 61 21,322 Gem ..............................................: 33 2,866 315,675 25 2,616 26 1,665 159,306 26 1,665 Gooding ..........................................: 33 7,047 632,544 27 6,126 24 3,684 382,375 23 (D) Idaho ............................................: 111 59,237 4,159,000 - - 126 54,470 3,379,419 1 (D) Jefferson ........................................: 58 24,511 2,279,582 36 10,190 102 43,318 4,804,249 101 (D) Jerome ...........................................: 54 8,373 1,102,703 51 7,556 59 8,233 993,332 59 8,233 Kootenai .........................................: 13 8,183 723,436 - - 22 11,676 666,235 2 (D) Latah ............................................: 130 89,496 7,146,371 - - 130 92,720 5,945,976 - - Lewis ............................................: 78 76,391 5,853,644 - - 69 54,350 3,084,711 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 18 5,186 510,500 18 4,164 29 9,138 875,857 27 (D) : Madison ..........................................: 110 45,667 3,022,780 88 21,781 110 46,132 4,468,117 100 35,791 Minidoka .........................................: 38 35,897 3,756,870 37 (D) 103 31,969 3,101,536 103 31,092 Nez Perce ........................................: 98 94,155 7,760,748 - - 104 105,449 6,951,420 - - Oneida ...........................................: 47 31,703 1,263,570 6 1,910 50 25,323 1,001,993 21 2,040 Owyhee ...........................................: 47 14,926 1,247,631 41 7,855 57 9,405 1,075,748 46 6,732 Payette ..........................................: 60 6,945 823,962 59 (D) 69 7,047 734,091 67 (D) Power ............................................: 68 102,492 7,176,291 41 37,442 85 115,990 9,008,741 59 63,556 Teton ............................................: 12 7,822 474,569 6 3,463 19 5,158 322,659 12 1,718 Twin Falls .......................................: 166 19,625 2,507,738 151 16,151 180 19,359 2,254,387 180 18,533 Washington .......................................: 33 6,857 706,401 23 5,804 58 6,730 496,864 46 4,334 : WINTER WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 1,706 786,449 67,262,659 884 268,193 1,775 720,308 57,773,652 1,027 274,198 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WINTER WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 29 5,365 640,491 23 4,130 41 6,308 702,144 33 4,883 Adams ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 26 13,106 780,756 3 (D) 36 15,672 1,003,812 9 5,359 Bear Lake ........................................: 8 774 22,874 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 1 (D) Benewah ..........................................: 24 25,544 1,840,311 - - 31 22,566 1,515,015 - - Bingham ..........................................: 111 94,507 10,427,586 108 92,305 115 84,554 9,768,933 106 80,270 Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: - - - - - 5 384 (D) - - Bonneville .......................................: 57 (D) 1,637,151 46 12,591 43 20,493 1,542,291 26 (D) Boundary .........................................: 28 13,500 1,195,066 - - 16 5,950 487,296 - - : Butte ............................................: 14 4,779 562,851 14 4,779 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Camas ............................................: - - - - - 5 (D) (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 195 33,011 4,110,520 158 23,841 185 27,488 2,994,958 176 25,017 Caribou ..........................................: 50 26,757 1,354,305 16 7,548 53 22,019 1,301,608 17 4,782 Cassia ...........................................: 98 48,246 3,936,337 66 26,239 80 43,619 3,650,902 65 27,809 Clark ............................................: 3 1,465 162,150 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Clearwater .......................................: 8 (D) (D) - - 11 5,683 (D) - - Elmore ...........................................: 16 8,180 850,588 8 5,702 17 17,742 1,742,833 12 (D) Franklin .........................................: 43 10,962 502,513 21 2,223 85 14,363 716,229 46 5,367 Fremont ..........................................: 35 7,762 596,911 23 4,833 28 (D) (D) 23 (D) : Gem ..............................................: 24 1,570 198,508 16 1,320 26 (D) (D) 26 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 20 6,062 538,811 14 5,141 15 2,191 244,848 14 (D) Idaho ............................................: 107 51,775 3,759,780 - - 117 49,826 3,173,520 1 (D) Jefferson ........................................: 27 10,538 1,184,091 20 5,953 21 (D) (D) 21 (D) Jerome ...........................................: 43 7,344 981,283 39 6,527 48 6,317 797,019 48 6,317 Kootenai .........................................: 12 7,616 697,946 - - 18 9,553 507,979 - - Latah ............................................: 117 73,645 6,170,202 - - 117 69,446 4,824,383 - - Lewis ............................................: 78 67,107 5,268,538 - - 59 48,474 2,826,940 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 14 (D) 282,881 11 (D) 16 4,456 467,510 16 4,260 Madison ..........................................: 24 (D) (D) 18 (D) 20 (D) (D) 15 2,880 : Minidoka .........................................: 14 (D) 1,789,021 8 10,913 38 (D) (D) 37 (D) Nez Perce ........................................: 95 74,310 6,324,889 - - 98 88,600 6,198,448 - - Oneida ...........................................: 44 27,206 1,005,855 3 435 40 16,446 734,344 10 1,116 Owyhee ...........................................: 44 12,133 1,092,070 36 5,062 54 7,485 865,911 42 6,041 Payette ..........................................: 56 (D) (D) 55 (D) 63 6,319 676,782 61 (D) Power ............................................: 53 71,827 4,960,216 25 (D) 69 70,627 5,261,406 41 30,748 Teton ............................................: 5 3,342 108,454 2 (D) 12 2,122 97,752 6 468 Twin Falls .......................................: 153 17,823 2,301,136 128 14,349 134 13,151 1,584,824 134 12,329 Washington .......................................: 30 6,330 664,436 18 5,277 52 5,751 420,924 37 3,550 : DURUM WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 50 10,250 801,586 36 5,800 82 23,590 1,914,309 74 16,990 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 3 29 2,845 3 29 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Bannock ..........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 1,500 127,500 3 1,500 12 3,784 315,970 10 (D) Bonneville .......................................: 7 (D) (D) 4 (D) 12 3,819 165,204 10 (D) Butte ............................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Canyon ...........................................: - - - - - 3 48 5,432 3 48 Caribou ..........................................: 4 144 10,818 1 (D) - - - - - Cassia ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 588 82,302 3 588 Clark ............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Elmore ...........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : Franklin .........................................: 3 502 56,800 2 (D) - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: 4 852 84,900 4 771 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Gem ..............................................: 3 45 4,377 3 45 - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 3 135 13,196 2 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Lincoln ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Madison ..........................................: 3 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 988 Minidoka .........................................: 3 (D) 164,008 3 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Nez Perce ........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 42 4,566 3 42 : Power ............................................: 4 675 69,044 2 (D) 12 5,374 462,727 10 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 12 1,681 158,054 12 1,681 Washington .......................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : OTHER SPRING WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 918 365,898 25,659,376 547 174,715 1,301 438,899 34,495,375 867 259,746 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 12 667 63,810 12 667 26 (D) (D) 24 (D) Adams ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 16 13,791 597,316 8 (D) 28 (D) (D) 7 1,881 Bear Lake ........................................: 13 6,250 180,192 1 (D) 19 (D) (D) 5 (D) Benewah ..........................................: 9 5,892 246,867 - - 12 3,690 141,923 - - Bingham ..........................................: 76 40,681 4,149,588 71 39,811 111 47,545 5,023,409 99 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 25. Field Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER SPRING WHEAT FOR GRAIN : (BUSHELS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 5 1,418 107,524 1 (D) Bonner ...........................................: 4 242 (D) - - 3 123 (D) - - Bonneville .......................................: 48 27,612 (D) 32 (D) 90 25,075 1,750,399 67 12,630 Boundary .........................................: 19 2,405 158,681 - - 14 2,428 136,316 - - Butte ............................................: 8 (D) (D) 8 (D) 31 7,787 885,337 26 6,609 Camas ............................................: 12 7,314 407,885 5 1,472 15 (D) (D) 6 1,567 Canyon ...........................................: 66 5,770 592,598 66 5,770 44 4,111 370,236 41 3,905 Caribou ..........................................: 33 16,643 577,316 9 (D) 61 31,609 1,388,945 24 7,151 Cassia ...........................................: 45 (D) (D) 45 (D) 54 26,156 2,630,047 48 22,531 Clark ............................................: 8 5,792 631,871 2 (D) 14 6,583 729,565 14 6,583 : Clearwater .......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 6 2,152 (D) - - Custer ...........................................: 7 (D) 9,185 7 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Elmore ...........................................: 11 (D) (D) 11 (D) 7 2,009 188,964 5 (D) Franklin .........................................: 13 450 23,712 5 (D) 27 3,197 147,152 23 2,517 Fremont ..........................................: 49 28,560 1,222,175 27 8,199 57 30,247 2,137,430 44 15,458 Gem ..............................................: 7 1,251 112,790 7 1,251 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 14 985 93,733 14 985 11 1,493 137,527 11 1,493 Idaho ............................................: 36 7,462 399,220 - - 30 4,644 205,899 - - Jefferson ........................................: 37 13,838 1,082,295 15 (D) 93 33,162 3,584,776 92 (D) Jerome ...........................................: 14 1,029 121,420 14 1,029 12 1,916 196,313 12 1,916 : Kootenai .........................................: 4 567 25,490 - - 12 2,123 158,256 2 (D) Latah ............................................: 57 15,851 976,169 - - 66 23,274 1,121,593 - - Lewis ............................................: 21 9,284 585,106 - - 25 5,876 257,771 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 6 2,671 (D) 6 2,671 14 (D) (D) 12 (D) Madison ..........................................: 93 38,998 2,518,584 70 18,145 102 40,238 3,981,530 92 31,923 Minidoka .........................................: 31 18,678 1,803,841 31 18,678 82 21,087 2,173,527 82 20,953 Nez Perce ........................................: 39 (D) (D) - - 57 16,849 752,972 - - Oneida ...........................................: 12 4,497 257,715 4 1,475 27 8,877 267,649 11 924 Owyhee ...........................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 11 1,920 209,837 8 691 Payette ..........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 10 686 52,743 9 (D) : Power ............................................: 40 29,990 2,147,031 27 20,809 47 39,989 3,284,608 36 (D) Teton ............................................: 9 4,480 366,115 4 (D) 14 3,036 224,907 6 1,250 Twin Falls .......................................: 33 (D) (D) 33 (D) 46 4,527 511,509 46 4,523 Washington .......................................: 5 527 41,965 5 527 13 (D) (D) 10 (D) : WILD RICE (CWT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Counties : : Benewah ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIELD AND GRASS SEED CROPS, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 187 56,098 (X) 79 14,585 168 43,570 (X) 52 8,817 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: - - (X) - - 12 703 (X) 10 (D) Benewah ........................................: 9 6,900 (X) - - 20 5,303 (X) - - Bingham ........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Blaine .........................................: 3 2,790 (X) 3 2,790 - - (X) - - Bonneville .....................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) - - Boundary .......................................: 6 1,028 (X) - - 3 945 (X) - - Canyon .........................................: 42 8,082 (X) 38 7,480 16 2,551 (X) 14 (D) Caribou ........................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Cassia .........................................: 4 1,784 (X) - - - - (X) - - Clearwater .....................................: 4 140 (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - : Elmore .........................................: 1 (D) (X) - - 3 1,924 (X) 3 1,924 Franklin .......................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Gem ............................................: - - (X) - - 5 281 (X) 5 281 Idaho ..........................................: 8 3,111 (X) - - 10 1,620 (X) - - Jefferson ......................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - Jerome .........................................: 4 418 (X) 4 418 - - (X) - - Kootenai .......................................: 1 (D) (X) - - 16 3,090 (X) 2 (D) Latah ..........................................: 26 3,296 (X) - - 19 2,915 (X) - - Lewis ..........................................: 29 15,807 (X) - - 33 14,342 (X) - - Minidoka .......................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) : Nez Perce ......................................: 9 4,922 (X) - - 8 5,576 (X) - - Oneida .........................................: 17 4,116 (X) 10 (D) 3 1,392 (X) 3 1,392 Owyhee .........................................: 13 1,822 (X) 13 1,822 2 (D) (X) - - Payette ........................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 5 959 (X) 5 959 Power ..........................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Twin Falls .....................................: 3 116 (X) 3 116 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) Washington .....................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 3 259 (X) 3 259 : ALFALFA SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 69 13,127 8,860,701 65 12,634 19 5,492 5,447,004 17 (D) : Counties : : Ada ............................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Bingham ........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Blaine .........................................: 3 2,790 1,110,000 3 2,790 - - - - - Canyon .........................................: 27 5,836 4,045,371 27 5,836 5 1,355 1,316,600 5 1,355 Caribou ........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Elmore .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Idaho ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Jefferson ......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Jerome .........................................: 4 418 307,385 4 418 - - - - - Minidoka .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) : Nez Perce ......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Oneida .........................................: 11 750 302,962 10 (D) 3 1,392 1,170,000 3 1,392 Owyhee .........................................: 13 (D) 2,266,793 13 (D) - - - - - Payette ........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) 625,500 4 (D) Twin Falls .....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Washington .....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : BROMEGRASS SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 16 931 477,337 - - 17 1,132 557,616 - - : Counties : : Benewah ........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Clearwater .....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Latah ..........................................: 7 (D) 269,370 - - 8 727 378,272 - - Lewis ..........................................: 7 488 (D) - - 5 282 122,000 - - Nez Perce ......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) - - : CRIMSON CLOVER SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Washington .....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : FESCUE SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 17 2,953 292,233 - - 16 3,080 1,063,012 1 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FESCUE SEED (POUNDS) - Con. : : Counties : : Ada ............................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Benewah ........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 (D) 776,806 - - Clearwater .....................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Idaho ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Latah ..........................................: 6 1,150 196,275 - - 3 119 60,000 - - Lewis ..........................................: 7 1,220 45,615 - - 6 489 45,782 - - Nez Perce ......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 2 (D) (D) - - : KENTUCKY BLUEGRASS SEED : (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 62 26,319 19,474,969 3 (D) 79 23,712 12,921,171 2 (D) : Counties : : Benewah ........................................: 8 (D) 4,302,060 - - 19 4,300 2,622,038 - - Canyon .........................................: 3 (D) 2,490,000 3 (D) - - - - - Clearwater .....................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Idaho ..........................................: 7 (D) 1,723,564 - - 10 1,620 (D) - - Kootenai .......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 14 (D) 1,438,520 2 (D) Latah ..........................................: 7 (D) 485,200 - - 1 (D) (D) - - Lewis ..........................................: 28 10,909 7,978,616 - - 27 10,893 6,291,101 - - Nez Perce ......................................: 6 3,733 2,266,129 - - 8 (D) 1,665,636 - - : ORCHARDGRASS SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 7 (D) 336,000 6 (D) 5 (D) 62,060 4 (D) : Counties : : Ada ............................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Canyon .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Idaho ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Latah ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Owyhee .........................................: 6 (D) (D) 6 (D) - - - - - : RED CLOVER SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 16 637 406,824 13 515 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: - - - - - 4 104 105,004 4 104 Canyon .........................................: - - - - - 4 (D) 96,900 3 (D) Gem ............................................: - - - - - 4 140 32,000 4 140 Latah ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Owyhee .........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Washington .....................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : RYEGRASS SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 11 380 (D) - - - - - - - : Counties : : Elmore .........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Latah ..........................................: 7 13 32,500 - - - - - - - Nez Perce ......................................: 3 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : TIMOTHY SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 9 978 735,002 - - 3 945 (D) - - : Counties : : Benewah ........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Boundary .......................................: 5 (D) 700,000 - - 3 945 (D) - - Latah ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Nez Perce ......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : VETCH SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Counties : : Clearwater .....................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WHEATGRASS SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 21 7,609 1,852,023 - - 18 3,041 873,528 - - : Counties : : Bonneville .....................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Cassia .........................................: 4 1,784 (D) - - - - - - - Clearwater .....................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Latah ..........................................: 3 (D) (D) - - 9 1,561 558,600 - - Lewis ..........................................: 7 (D) 1,234,335 - - 5 704 130,728 - - Nez Perce ......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Oneida .........................................: 6 2,184 316,248 - - - - - - - : WHITE CLOVER SEED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: - - - - - 10 2,615 954,426 3 477 : Counties : : Canyon .........................................: - - - - - 3 477 (D) 3 477 Latah ..........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Lewis ..........................................: - - - - - 5 (D) 347,956 - - : OTHER FIELD AND GRASS SEED : CROPS (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 32 3,499 1,557,737 11 490 22 2,627 1,918,884 15 2,266 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Boundary .......................................: 1 (D) (D) - - - - - - - Canyon .........................................: 12 (D) 832,000 8 (D) 4 564 47,710 3 (D) Elmore .........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Franklin .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Gem ............................................: - - - - - 3 141 69,875 3 141 Kootenai .......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Latah ..........................................: 6 374 204,068 - - 1 (D) (D) - - Lewis ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 3 (D) 189,273 - - Nez Perce ......................................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - - : Oneida .........................................: 6 1,182 192,000 - - - - - - - Payette ........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Power ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .....................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : FORAGE - LAND USED FOR ALL HAY : AND HAYLAGE, GRASS SILAGE, AND : GREENCHOP (TONS, DRY EQUIVALENT) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 10,279 1,415,865 5,361,120 8,042 1,102,400 12,276 1,509,295 5,833,186 9,191 1,142,122 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 529 14,184 60,941 529 13,964 669 24,002 111,597 654 23,198 Adams ..........................................: 107 13,962 29,084 95 10,862 117 14,866 36,727 80 10,729 Bannock ........................................: 372 28,017 76,716 293 17,963 342 34,951 93,639 252 21,678 Bear Lake ......................................: 246 50,840 80,847 221 33,538 259 62,726 153,219 202 40,221 Benewah ........................................: 87 11,059 31,671 1 (D) 127 13,919 36,068 7 178 Bingham ........................................: 459 80,538 327,927 458 (D) 536 92,724 422,185 512 87,326 Blaine .........................................: 129 33,196 126,296 129 33,196 125 28,148 101,168 118 23,347 Boise ..........................................: 30 802 2,833 26 687 37 892 2,767 30 500 Bonner .........................................: 326 17,259 24,482 36 592 529 21,602 27,587 23 628 Bonneville .....................................: 404 46,574 164,441 368 35,411 529 28,922 113,664 470 22,894 : Boundary .......................................: 146 12,005 33,826 6 212 164 15,902 43,223 5 258 Butte ..........................................: 94 42,027 190,534 94 42,027 146 47,224 178,863 146 47,104 Camas ..........................................: 76 57,723 92,095 34 17,257 99 67,526 113,645 35 19,436 Canyon .........................................: 846 47,739 185,306 843 46,652 961 49,359 233,977 947 47,700 Caribou ........................................: 163 31,988 75,011 120 18,998 192 27,834 75,349 132 17,163 Cassia .........................................: 274 73,373 350,057 272 (D) 309 75,712 373,316 298 71,818 Clark ..........................................: 33 38,627 152,613 26 35,663 31 23,190 129,475 27 20,940 Clearwater .....................................: 122 7,651 14,886 - - 145 7,654 11,569 3 12 Custer .........................................: 137 29,267 89,814 137 28,697 169 32,876 99,824 168 (D) Elmore .........................................: 121 39,859 179,623 119 (D) 154 45,846 223,900 147 41,286 : Franklin .......................................: 429 46,244 136,817 357 34,497 457 50,308 159,833 403 41,335 Fremont ........................................: 209 31,596 107,095 170 14,543 228 22,221 78,192 191 14,653 Gem ............................................: 336 11,081 40,972 329 10,788 388 12,482 45,996 380 11,144 Gooding ........................................: 213 45,541 298,784 213 45,541 282 38,002 224,848 277 36,637 Idaho ..........................................: 361 35,590 63,522 22 218 373 34,545 62,989 19 594 Jefferson ......................................: 401 76,282 380,751 401 74,840 436 81,980 397,938 436 80,209 Jerome .........................................: 220 40,045 271,731 220 40,045 258 36,430 225,063 252 36,113 Kootenai .......................................: 352 22,673 51,647 95 5,094 455 23,834 60,077 109 10,210 Latah ..........................................: 336 30,154 79,592 3 39 451 40,878 101,446 4 50 Lemhi ..........................................: 148 31,938 95,879 147 (D) 199 40,017 114,643 199 39,217 : Lewis ..........................................: 68 7,797 17,900 7 92 71 7,447 16,439 - - Lincoln ........................................: 114 28,405 141,375 114 28,405 185 38,061 181,887 184 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FORAGE - LAND USED FOR ALL HAY : AND HAYLAGE, GRASS SILAGE, AND : GREENCHOP (TONS, DRY : EQUIVALENT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Madison ........................................: 154 14,546 62,151 147 13,950 217 18,808 72,046 214 17,709 Minidoka .......................................: 225 36,478 195,663 225 36,478 296 48,697 250,678 296 48,677 Nez Perce ......................................: 132 12,197 23,207 21 200 165 14,538 31,038 33 827 Oneida .........................................: 217 37,101 92,086 172 22,324 234 33,830 96,131 183 19,302 Owyhee .........................................: 223 52,823 198,424 220 52,041 318 70,803 336,361 313 64,954 Payette ........................................: 272 23,068 123,780 272 23,068 305 18,941 97,756 299 18,837 Power ..........................................: 88 17,318 84,632 70 13,379 97 11,291 46,546 82 8,262 Shoshone .......................................: 11 308 398 - - 23 512 548 - - Teton ..........................................: 122 18,801 38,568 100 13,381 149 26,927 69,820 121 17,964 Twin Falls .....................................: 600 81,871 458,293 600 81,871 668 84,037 455,352 653 81,738 : Valley .........................................: 48 3,467 5,708 36 2,649 54 2,787 4,774 27 2,183 Washington .....................................: 299 33,851 103,142 294 32,903 327 36,044 121,023 260 24,399 : HAY - ALL HAY INCLUDING ALFALFA : AND OTHER DRY HAY (TONS, DRY) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 9,537 1,298,726 4,508,664 7,587 1,001,236 11,432 1,414,995 5,235,391 8,752 1,061,061 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 479 11,323 47,342 479 11,103 602 19,763 76,278 587 18,959 Adams ..........................................: 97 13,452 28,603 86 10,374 109 14,362 35,547 75 10,601 Bannock ........................................: 357 26,261 71,603 277 16,630 333 33,806 91,829 247 21,204 Bear Lake ......................................: 239 48,356 77,762 215 31,394 244 61,113 150,975 195 38,915 Benewah ........................................: 77 10,873 31,551 - - 111 13,271 35,601 7 178 Bingham ........................................: 441 76,370 310,393 440 (D) 511 86,613 390,484 493 81,401 Blaine .........................................: 126 33,151 126,139 126 33,151 125 27,848 101,020 118 23,047 Boise ..........................................: 30 802 2,833 26 687 37 886 2,765 30 500 Bonner .........................................: 266 11,897 19,308 31 478 417 18,970 25,436 20 622 Bonneville .....................................: 384 45,984 162,167 354 34,870 506 28,546 112,632 452 22,670 : Boundary .......................................: 141 11,747 33,639 6 212 157 15,711 43,028 5 258 Butte ..........................................: 93 41,728 189,290 93 41,728 146 47,200 178,759 146 47,080 Camas ..........................................: 74 57,285 91,327 32 17,017 99 67,435 113,618 35 19,436 Canyon .........................................: 794 43,364 151,848 791 42,277 896 45,260 210,526 884 43,813 Caribou ........................................: 158 31,452 69,415 120 18,532 191 27,434 68,676 131 16,799 Cassia .........................................: 255 58,735 225,001 255 58,735 295 59,571 255,749 284 55,751 Clark ..........................................: 33 38,627 152,367 26 35,663 31 23,190 129,229 27 20,940 Clearwater .....................................: 89 6,269 14,040 - - 115 6,314 10,722 3 12 Custer .........................................: 135 29,055 89,210 135 28,485 159 32,712 99,520 158 (D) Elmore .........................................: 118 33,741 119,691 116 (D) 151 42,258 188,004 144 37,698 : Franklin .......................................: 409 45,028 130,081 342 33,534 440 49,297 154,999 391 40,349 Fremont ........................................: 196 30,904 105,122 157 13,857 227 21,618 74,617 190 14,135 Gem ............................................: 308 10,762 39,105 301 10,469 353 11,266 43,807 345 10,600 Gooding ........................................: 190 28,754 134,878 190 28,754 252 27,224 133,113 245 25,862 Idaho ..........................................: 310 32,409 60,634 17 199 346 32,993 60,695 18 574 Jefferson ......................................: 390 68,757 319,239 390 67,257 433 77,051 369,135 433 75,280 Jerome .........................................: 198 29,979 150,293 198 29,979 236 28,394 165,856 230 28,081 Kootenai .......................................: 292 21,118 50,055 80 4,781 368 22,316 58,627 96 10,092 Latah ..........................................: 281 28,610 78,165 3 39 380 39,395 99,126 4 50 Lemhi ..........................................: 140 30,322 80,197 139 (D) 185 38,936 113,350 185 38,136 : Lewis ..........................................: 65 7,643 17,703 5 88 67 7,169 15,558 - - Lincoln ........................................: 113 25,199 108,408 113 25,199 185 37,305 175,233 184 (D) Madison ........................................: 148 14,297 61,507 141 13,701 215 18,678 71,298 212 17,579 Minidoka .......................................: 220 35,409 182,537 220 35,409 282 45,740 233,840 282 45,720 Nez Perce ......................................: 114 11,165 22,499 15 182 158 14,253 30,737 33 808 Oneida .........................................: 214 36,133 82,138 169 21,356 232 33,480 94,602 182 19,066 Owyhee .........................................: 222 47,332 170,685 219 46,550 308 67,002 301,007 302 61,089 Payette ........................................: 256 21,866 116,455 256 21,866 296 18,339 93,600 290 18,236 Power ..........................................: 88 17,146 84,354 70 13,207 95 11,264 45,924 81 8,255 Shoshone .......................................: 7 175 336 - - 9 385 468 - - : Teton ..........................................: 114 18,002 37,993 95 12,933 140 26,724 69,606 114 17,861 Twin Falls .....................................: 548 70,155 354,276 548 70,155 630 75,538 384,806 618 73,318 Valley .........................................: 40 3,357 5,481 28 2,539 39 2,457 4,256 22 1,981 Washington .....................................: 288 33,732 102,994 283 32,784 321 35,908 120,733 254 24,333 : ALFALFA HAY (TONS, DRY) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 7,480 1,047,568 3,926,331 6,466 870,101 9,039 1,133,062 4,561,851 7,696 918,373 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 328 8,424 39,702 328 8,424 424 16,555 68,131 413 15,905 Adams ..........................................: 62 8,376 18,290 60 (D) 76 9,458 25,005 47 6,321 Bannock ........................................: 295 21,101 61,354 230 13,936 289 25,609 79,419 222 19,118 Bear Lake ......................................: 206 35,332 58,905 180 21,372 218 40,717 112,714 176 26,554 Benewah ........................................: 14 1,138 2,717 - - 23 793 1,936 - - Bingham ........................................: 410 70,266 292,321 410 70,266 453 68,406 310,786 443 65,919 Blaine .........................................: 117 28,678 116,448 117 28,678 117 25,090 96,091 110 (D) Boise ..........................................: 21 626 2,203 21 626 25 (D) (D) 19 (D) Bonner .........................................: 63 3,202 7,353 7 127 92 3,032 4,220 8 225 Bonneville .....................................: 339 40,638 152,213 314 32,710 435 26,391 109,329 396 21,552 Boundary .......................................: 124 9,058 29,265 4 (D) 135 12,406 35,831 4 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALFALFA HAY (TONS, DRY) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Butte ..........................................: 91 39,156 179,906 91 39,156 141 43,662 171,979 141 43,662 Camas ..........................................: 66 54,965 87,505 29 16,319 93 65,806 110,497 35 18,666 Canyon .........................................: 637 33,637 131,689 637 33,625 763 41,432 200,222 754 40,410 Caribou ........................................: 140 26,786 62,236 108 16,014 160 22,470 53,549 119 13,375 Cassia .........................................: 237 52,722 210,839 237 52,722 284 54,848 243,715 278 51,304 Clark ..........................................: 28 36,296 146,451 23 (D) 29 21,219 121,153 25 (D) Clearwater .....................................: 31 1,246 3,273 - - 27 1,045 2,594 - - Custer .........................................: 122 24,951 76,730 122 24,951 148 29,817 91,934 147 (D) Elmore .........................................: 98 28,846 109,187 98 28,846 138 36,633 170,861 132 32,778 Franklin .......................................: 347 36,521 110,123 295 28,402 409 42,048 142,615 363 35,007 : Fremont ........................................: 181 28,409 99,795 145 11,761 209 20,477 72,845 176 13,430 Gem ............................................: 188 7,720 31,930 188 7,720 255 8,209 36,253 248 7,806 Gooding ........................................: 173 27,531 129,338 173 27,531 243 26,305 130,536 236 24,943 Idaho ..........................................: 167 17,298 34,318 15 181 171 16,021 31,918 10 436 Jefferson ......................................: 372 63,246 308,306 372 63,246 420 71,346 356,752 420 71,105 Jerome .........................................: 191 28,839 146,068 191 28,839 225 27,662 164,160 219 27,349 Kootenai .......................................: 110 6,608 15,440 47 3,755 126 6,444 18,296 47 3,372 Latah ..........................................: 108 4,997 12,684 2 (D) 111 4,479 10,192 2 (D) Lemhi ..........................................: 98 20,336 52,622 98 20,336 142 (D) 87,901 142 (D) Lewis ..........................................: 45 4,360 11,223 1 (D) 47 5,501 12,165 - - : Lincoln ........................................: 103 23,443 103,148 103 23,443 174 35,417 170,938 173 (D) Madison ........................................: 134 12,692 56,761 133 (D) 200 16,254 64,386 197 15,265 Minidoka .......................................: 203 32,210 171,063 203 32,210 264 41,621 220,348 264 41,601 Nez Perce ......................................: 85 6,692 14,006 11 149 117 9,124 21,301 27 503 Oneida .........................................: 190 27,985 66,659 152 17,573 208 26,176 84,728 161 14,184 Owyhee .........................................: 185 32,135 141,697 185 32,135 281 54,361 265,371 275 (D) Payette ........................................: 221 19,585 109,212 221 19,585 261 16,341 87,132 261 16,271 Power ..........................................: 88 15,804 81,519 70 (D) 87 10,008 43,434 73 7,450 Shoshone .......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - Teton ..........................................: 98 16,033 33,179 82 11,160 128 23,832 65,566 106 16,211 : Twin Falls .....................................: 493 59,958 314,985 493 59,958 597 67,627 350,318 587 (D) Valley .........................................: 15 1,286 2,442 14 (D) 14 684 2,193 10 561 Washington .....................................: 256 28,436 91,226 256 28,436 278 30,356 110,446 230 20,479 : OTHER DRY HAY (TONS, DRY) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 3,303 251,158 582,333 1,993 131,135 3,787 281,933 673,540 2,048 142,688 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 176 2,899 7,640 172 2,679 228 3,208 8,147 222 3,054 Adams ..........................................: 48 5,076 10,313 36 (D) 59 4,904 10,542 43 4,280 Bannock ........................................: 112 5,160 10,249 83 2,694 86 8,197 12,410 50 2,086 Bear Lake ......................................: 117 13,024 18,857 95 10,022 113 20,396 38,261 78 12,361 Benewah ........................................: 69 9,735 28,834 - - 93 12,478 33,665 7 178 Bingham ........................................: 81 6,104 18,072 74 (D) 105 18,207 79,698 95 15,482 Blaine .........................................: 40 4,473 9,691 40 4,473 30 2,758 4,929 29 (D) Boise ..........................................: 13 176 630 7 61 14 (D) (D) 12 (D) Bonner .........................................: 216 8,695 11,955 29 351 351 15,938 21,216 12 397 Bonneville .....................................: 80 5,346 9,954 63 2,160 100 2,155 3,303 72 1,118 : Boundary .......................................: 51 2,689 4,374 2 (D) 60 3,305 7,197 1 (D) Butte ..........................................: 20 2,572 9,384 20 2,572 25 3,538 6,780 25 3,418 Camas ..........................................: 17 2,320 3,822 8 698 14 1,629 3,121 6 770 Canyon .........................................: 229 9,727 20,159 220 8,652 194 3,828 10,304 190 3,403 Caribou ........................................: 44 4,666 7,179 35 2,518 56 4,964 15,127 31 3,424 Cassia .........................................: 39 6,013 14,162 39 6,013 50 4,723 12,034 42 4,447 Clark ..........................................: 10 2,331 5,916 8 (D) 7 1,971 8,076 6 (D) Clearwater .....................................: 65 5,023 10,767 - - 91 5,269 8,128 3 12 Custer .........................................: 39 4,104 12,480 39 3,534 38 2,895 7,586 38 2,895 Elmore .........................................: 38 4,895 10,504 29 (D) 31 5,625 17,143 28 4,920 : Franklin .......................................: 141 8,507 19,958 107 5,132 139 7,249 12,384 107 5,342 Fremont ........................................: 32 2,495 5,327 26 2,096 33 1,141 1,772 28 705 Gem ............................................: 143 3,042 7,175 133 2,749 141 3,057 7,554 134 2,794 Gooding ........................................: 32 1,223 5,540 32 1,223 27 919 2,577 27 919 Idaho ..........................................: 197 15,111 26,316 5 18 230 16,972 28,777 9 138 Jefferson ......................................: 74 5,511 10,933 67 4,011 65 5,705 12,383 59 4,175 Jerome .........................................: 15 1,140 4,225 15 1,140 21 732 1,696 21 732 Kootenai .......................................: 212 14,510 34,615 43 1,026 267 15,872 40,331 62 6,720 Latah ..........................................: 226 23,613 65,481 3 (D) 326 34,916 88,934 2 (D) Lemhi ..........................................: 72 9,986 27,575 69 (D) 88 (D) 25,449 87 (D) : Lewis ..........................................: 42 3,283 6,480 4 (D) 35 1,668 3,393 - - Lincoln ........................................: 27 1,756 5,260 27 1,756 43 1,888 4,295 43 1,858 Madison ........................................: 37 1,605 4,746 29 (D) 44 2,424 6,912 44 2,314 Minidoka .......................................: 36 3,199 11,474 36 3,199 35 4,119 13,492 35 4,119 Nez Perce ......................................: 55 4,473 8,493 5 33 72 5,129 9,436 18 305 Oneida .........................................: 68 8,148 15,479 51 3,783 83 7,304 9,874 66 4,882 Owyhee .........................................: 69 15,197 28,988 63 14,415 79 12,641 35,636 78 (D) Payette ........................................: 52 2,281 7,243 52 2,281 58 1,998 6,468 52 1,965 Power ..........................................: 12 1,342 2,835 10 (D) 25 1,256 2,490 19 805 Shoshone .......................................: 7 175 336 - - 7 (D) (D) - - : Teton ..........................................: 27 1,969 4,814 23 1,773 33 2,892 4,040 21 1,650 Twin Falls .....................................: 112 10,197 39,291 112 10,197 77 7,911 34,488 75 (D) Valley .........................................: 29 2,071 3,039 14 (D) 32 1,773 2,063 17 1,420 Washington .....................................: 82 5,296 11,768 68 4,348 82 5,552 10,287 54 3,854 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALL HAYLAGE, GRASS SILAGE, AND : GREENCHOP (TONS, GREEN) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 1,337 177,736 1,724,698 984 160,579 1,409 141,896 1,209,568 902 127,947 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 68 4,629 27,519 68 4,629 95 10,081 71,475 95 10,081 Adams ..........................................: 23 510 982 22 (D) 11 506 2,387 5 128 Bannock ........................................: 28 1,762 10,346 26 (D) 19 1,999 3,660 14 1,428 Bear Lake ......................................: 25 2,701 6,245 22 2,361 34 1,789 4,543 22 1,409 Benewah ........................................: 10 186 248 1 (D) 17 648 949 - - Bingham ........................................: 39 4,937 35,479 39 4,937 50 7,250 64,139 40 7,056 Blaine .........................................: 4 230 318 4 230 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Boise ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Bonner .........................................: 73 5,445 10,469 5 114 120 2,637 4,371 3 6 Bonneville .....................................: 30 686 4,600 23 635 40 511 2,090 33 361 : Boundary .......................................: 8 258 384 - - 13 219 393 - - Butte ..........................................: 5 429 2,520 5 429 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Camas ..........................................: 6 578 1,553 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) - - Canyon .........................................: 84 6,392 67,687 84 6,392 94 6,244 47,461 91 6,174 Caribou ........................................: 10 866 11,327 5 466 6 1,682 13,498 6 1,682 Cassia .........................................: 66 29,856 253,006 64 (D) 64 24,399 237,858 64 24,229 Clark ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Clearwater .....................................: 38 1,418 1,716 - - 36 1,340 1,721 - - Custer .........................................: 5 632 1,226 5 632 10 164 623 10 164 Elmore .........................................: 6 8,763 121,243 6 8,763 5 6,208 72,619 5 6,208 : Franklin .......................................: 47 3,110 13,628 40 2,777 40 2,272 9,792 34 2,197 Fremont ........................................: 21 741 3,997 21 735 12 939 7,234 9 (D) Gem ............................................: 38 582 3,786 38 582 44 1,224 4,434 44 588 Gooding ........................................: 64 26,336 331,593 64 26,336 76 17,258 185,580 76 17,002 Idaho ..........................................: 67 3,201 5,849 5 19 35 1,644 4,651 1 (D) Jefferson ......................................: 49 11,002 124,444 49 11,002 22 5,098 58,269 22 5,098 Jerome .........................................: 69 16,467 245,666 69 16,467 57 9,910 119,788 57 9,910 Kootenai .......................................: 66 1,585 3,235 18 323 106 1,608 2,958 19 262 Latah ..........................................: 58 1,770 2,901 - - 79 1,621 4,706 - - Lemhi ..........................................: 12 2,456 31,724 12 2,456 17 1,161 2,620 17 1,161 : Lewis ..........................................: 6 305 401 2 (D) 6 348 1,782 - - Lincoln ........................................: 22 5,252 66,695 22 5,252 16 1,785 13,456 16 1,785 Madison ........................................: 12 329 1,305 12 329 4 130 1,514 4 130 Minidoka .......................................: 18 4,459 26,557 18 4,459 28 4,093 34,064 28 4,093 Nez Perce ......................................: 22 1,066 1,432 6 18 22 340 611 5 19 Oneida .........................................: 5 1,082 20,125 5 1,082 15 539 3,091 6 420 Owyhee .........................................: 22 7,862 56,113 22 7,862 27 9,160 71,525 27 9,160 Payette ........................................: 39 1,647 14,827 39 1,647 23 1,462 8,407 23 1,462 Power ..........................................: 4 172 562 4 172 6 350 1,259 5 (D) Shoshone .......................................: 4 133 (D) - - 16 127 167 - - : Teton ..........................................: 15 799 1,164 8 448 13 404 440 7 103 Twin Falls .....................................: 124 16,752 210,439 124 16,752 97 13,681 142,720 92 13,593 Valley .........................................: 8 (D) 462 8 (D) 15 330 1,052 5 202 Washington .....................................: 16 120 301 16 120 12 138 593 12 138 : HAYLAGE OR GREENCHOP FROM : ALFALFA OR ALFALFA MIXTURES : (TONS, GREEN) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 527 111,950 1,258,964 518 111,495 566 98,825 934,417 490 96,663 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 21 3,452 23,641 21 3,452 32 7,659 45,584 32 7,659 Adams ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) Bannock ........................................: 8 501 6,928 7 (D) 9 1,135 2,537 8 (D) Bear Lake ......................................: 7 137 629 7 117 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Bingham ........................................: 13 3,133 18,120 13 3,133 27 6,069 49,637 21 6,051 Blaine .........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - - - Bonner .........................................: - - - - - 5 115 210 - - Bonneville .....................................: 10 60 (D) 8 (D) 14 194 1,416 12 (D) Boundary .......................................: - - - - - 6 158 325 - - Butte ..........................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : Camas ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Canyon .........................................: 28 3,262 34,495 28 3,262 40 4,695 41,325 37 4,625 Caribou ........................................: 3 (D) 7,100 3 (D) 5 1,362 9,178 5 1,362 Cassia .........................................: 46 24,324 200,783 46 24,324 47 17,825 181,227 47 17,655 Clark ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Clearwater .....................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 3 50 78 - - Custer .........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 5 125 560 5 125 Elmore .........................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) Franklin .......................................: 21 2,052 9,103 21 2,002 18 1,346 8,266 18 1,346 Fremont ........................................: 11 345 748 11 345 11 (D) (D) 9 (D) : Gem ............................................: 9 349 3,121 9 349 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Gooding ........................................: 55 17,995 249,278 55 17,995 65 15,673 172,623 65 15,417 Idaho ..........................................: 3 143 (D) - - 6 331 1,465 - - Jefferson ......................................: 23 6,162 70,687 23 6,162 11 2,662 26,380 11 2,662 Jerome .........................................: 60 14,751 228,823 60 14,751 50 7,757 93,164 50 7,757 Kootenai .......................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 16 271 589 4 176 Latah ..........................................: 2 (D) (D) - - 7 342 2,876 - - Lemhi ..........................................: 3 520 5,417 3 520 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HAYLAGE OR GREENCHOP FROM : ALFALFA OR ALFALFA MIXTURES : (TONS, GREEN) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Lewis ..........................................: - - - - - 3 (D) (D) - - Lincoln ........................................: 14 3,132 43,222 14 3,132 12 (D) 8,882 12 (D) Madison ........................................: 4 147 900 4 147 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Minidoka .......................................: 14 (D) (D) 14 (D) 22 2,993 29,407 22 2,993 Nez Perce ......................................: - - - - - 5 49 74 - - Oneida .........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 10 415 2,954 5 (D) Owyhee .........................................: 19 4,337 30,599 19 4,337 20 6,884 55,436 20 6,884 Payette ........................................: 23 1,051 10,892 23 1,051 13 1,279 6,375 13 1,279 Power ..........................................: - - - - - 5 (D) (D) 4 (D) Shoshone .......................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) - - : Teton ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .....................................: 104 13,960 190,221 104 13,960 75 10,753 122,033 72 (D) Valley .........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Washington .....................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : ALL OTHER HAYLAGE, GRASS SILAGE, : AND GREENCHOP (TONS, GREEN) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 902 65,786 465,734 555 49,084 909 43,071 275,151 471 31,284 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 49 1,177 3,878 49 1,177 64 2,422 25,891 64 2,422 Adams ..........................................: 22 (D) (D) 21 (D) 8 (D) (D) 4 (D) Bannock ........................................: 22 1,261 3,418 20 (D) 11 864 1,123 7 (D) Bear Lake ......................................: 21 2,564 5,616 18 2,244 32 (D) (D) 20 (D) Benewah ........................................: 10 186 248 1 (D) 17 648 949 - - Bingham ........................................: 27 1,804 17,359 27 1,804 25 1,181 14,502 21 1,005 Blaine .........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Boise ..........................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Bonner .........................................: 73 5,445 10,469 5 114 115 2,522 4,161 3 6 Bonneville .....................................: 24 626 (D) 19 (D) 35 317 674 29 (D) : Boundary .......................................: 8 258 384 - - 7 61 68 - - Butte ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Camas ..........................................: 4 (D) (D) - - 1 (D) (D) - - Canyon .........................................: 62 3,130 33,192 62 3,130 63 1,549 6,136 63 1,549 Caribou ........................................: 9 (D) 4,227 2 (D) 3 320 4,320 3 320 Cassia .........................................: 32 5,532 52,223 30 (D) 27 6,574 56,631 27 6,574 Clearwater .....................................: 37 (D) (D) - - 34 1,290 1,643 - - Custer .........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 39 63 5 39 Elmore .........................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) Franklin .......................................: 30 1,058 4,525 23 775 26 926 1,526 20 851 : Fremont ........................................: 14 396 3,249 14 390 1 (D) (D) - - Gem ............................................: 29 233 665 29 233 44 (D) (D) 42 (D) Gooding ........................................: 33 8,341 82,315 33 8,341 13 1,585 12,957 13 1,585 Idaho ..........................................: 64 3,058 (D) 5 19 29 1,313 3,186 1 (D) Jefferson ......................................: 28 4,840 53,757 28 4,840 11 2,436 31,889 11 2,436 Jerome .........................................: 17 1,716 16,843 17 1,716 11 2,153 26,624 11 2,153 Kootenai .......................................: 63 (D) (D) 15 (D) 92 1,337 2,369 15 86 Latah ..........................................: 56 (D) (D) - - 72 1,279 1,830 - - Lemhi ..........................................: 11 1,936 26,307 11 1,936 16 (D) (D) 16 (D) Lewis ..........................................: 6 305 401 2 (D) 4 (D) (D) - - : Lincoln ........................................: 11 2,120 23,473 11 2,120 4 (D) 4,574 4 (D) Madison ........................................: 8 182 405 8 182 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Minidoka .......................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 13 1,100 4,657 13 1,100 Nez Perce ......................................: 22 1,066 1,432 6 18 17 291 537 5 19 Oneida .........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 5 124 137 1 (D) Owyhee .........................................: 6 3,525 25,514 6 3,525 9 2,276 16,089 9 2,276 Payette ........................................: 20 596 3,935 20 596 12 183 2,032 12 183 Power ..........................................: 4 172 562 4 172 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Shoshone .......................................: 4 133 (D) - - 14 (D) (D) - - Teton ..........................................: 14 (D) (D) 7 (D) 10 (D) (D) 6 (D) : Twin Falls .....................................: 25 2,792 20,218 25 2,792 25 2,928 20,687 23 (D) Valley .........................................: 8 (D) 462 8 (D) 14 (D) (D) 4 (D) Washington .....................................: 16 120 301 16 120 11 (D) (D) 11 (D) : CORN FOR SILAGE OR : GREENCHOP (TONS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 772 258,326 7,412,427 770 (D) 1,031 275,136 8,047,967 1,031 275,136 : Counties : : Ada ............................................: 17 6,446 186,938 17 6,446 38 11,589 339,993 38 11,589 Adams ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Bannock ........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Bingham ........................................: 24 7,238 184,454 24 7,238 13 2,859 66,770 13 2,859 Bonneville .....................................: 11 5,876 112,298 11 5,876 21 4,220 85,477 21 4,220 Butte ..........................................: 4 252 5,134 4 252 3 251 5,237 3 251 Camas ..........................................: 3 940 28,760 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Canyon .........................................: 119 23,669 657,566 119 23,669 119 20,293 613,271 119 20,293 Caribou ........................................: 3 309 6,843 3 309 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Cassia .........................................: 64 38,193 1,169,603 64 38,193 51 29,456 820,592 51 29,456 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 26. Field Seeds, Grass Seeds, Forage, Hay, and Silage: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CORN FOR SILAGE OR : GREENCHOP (TONS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Clark ..........................................: 4 1,518 27,196 4 1,518 4 1,460 24,459 4 1,460 Custer .........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Elmore .........................................: 10 8,473 252,054 10 8,473 16 10,775 326,165 16 10,775 Franklin .......................................: 33 5,361 129,312 33 5,361 60 5,189 117,896 60 5,189 Fremont ........................................: 4 233 6,291 4 233 - - - - - Gem ............................................: 8 417 12,202 8 417 23 1,802 47,897 23 1,802 Gooding ........................................: 96 44,114 1,377,743 96 44,114 121 56,767 1,739,854 121 56,767 Jefferson ......................................: 27 7,533 173,987 27 7,533 39 5,168 119,671 39 5,168 Jerome .........................................: 88 25,138 784,053 88 25,138 125 40,941 1,265,247 125 40,941 Lincoln ........................................: 13 9,211 282,504 13 9,211 31 13,522 403,842 31 13,522 : Madison ........................................: 8 793 19,476 8 793 9 586 12,119 9 586 Minidoka .......................................: 15 11,907 292,290 15 11,907 29 8,032 233,937 29 8,032 Oneida .........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Owyhee .........................................: 29 11,115 247,880 29 11,115 47 11,736 351,148 47 11,736 Payette ........................................: 30 5,733 161,485 30 5,733 48 6,064 173,127 48 6,064 Power ..........................................: 4 904 23,392 4 904 8 1,326 35,087 8 1,326 Teton ..........................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Twin Falls .....................................: 138 41,145 1,222,347 138 41,145 209 41,625 1,223,879 209 41,625 Washington .....................................: 13 874 24,430 13 874 12 525 16,265 12 525 : SORGHUM FOR SILAGE OR : GREENCHOP (TONS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..........................................: 5 2,082 39,562 4 (D) 21 1,559 22,489 21 1,553 : Counties : : Canyon .........................................: 1 (D) (D) - - 4 295 3,419 4 295 Caribou ........................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Cassia .........................................: - - - - - 4 150 1,890 4 150 Franklin .......................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 5 228 1,050 5 228 Gooding ........................................: - - - - - 4 440 6,370 4 440 Jerome .........................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Twin Falls .....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 27. Other Crops: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CORN, TRADITIONAL OR : INDIAN (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Gem ....................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : HERBS, DRIED (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 7 16 768 7 16 1 (D) (D) - - : Counties : : Boise ..................................: 3 12 360 3 12 - - - - - Bonner .................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) - - Lemhi ..................................: 4 4 408 4 4 - - - - - : HOPS (POUNDS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 16 9,785 16,375,200 16 9,785 25 9,641 19,869,139 25 9,641 : Counties : : Boundary ...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Canyon .................................: 11 (D) (D) 11 (D) 24 (D) (D) 24 (D) Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - - - Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - : MINT FOR OIL, ALL : (POUNDS OF OIL) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 100 13,955 1,602,557 100 13,955 107 20,178 2,230,783 107 20,178 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 12 859 93,616 12 859 17 1,947 228,082 17 1,947 Boundary ...............................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Canyon .................................: 74 9,014 1,071,271 74 9,014 67 11,671 1,379,881 67 11,671 Elmore .................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Gem ....................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 534 53,150 3 534 Kootenai ...............................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Minidoka ...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Owyhee .................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Payette ................................: 4 880 97,901 4 880 11 2,222 222,300 11 2,222 Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : MINT FOR OIL, PEPPERMINT : (POUNDS OF OIL) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 88 13,159 1,507,987 88 13,159 105 19,092 2,093,183 105 19,092 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 9 810 85,266 9 810 15 1,598 179,482 15 1,598 Boundary ...............................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Canyon .................................: 66 8,499 1,013,530 66 8,499 67 11,304 1,337,131 67 11,304 Elmore .................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Gem ....................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 534 53,150 3 534 Kootenai ...............................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) Owyhee .................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) Payette ................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 11 1,852 176,050 11 1,852 Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : MINT FOR OIL, SPEARMINT : (POUNDS OF OIL) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 21 796 94,570 21 796 21 1,086 137,600 21 1,086 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 3 49 8,350 3 49 10 349 48,600 10 349 Canyon .................................: 15 515 57,741 15 515 7 367 42,750 7 367 Minidoka ...............................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - - Payette ................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 4 370 46,250 4 370 : SWITCHGRASS (TONS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 27. Other Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Harvested : Irrigated : Harvested : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Quantity : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SWITCHGRASS (TONS) - Con. : : Counties : : Bingham ................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) : OTHER CROPS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 6 847 (X) 5 (D) 19 1,978 (X) 14 1,613 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Bingham ................................: - - (X) - - 3 413 (X) 3 413 Bonneville .............................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - Canyon .................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) - - (X) - - Caribou ................................: 2 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) - - Elmore .................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) Fremont ................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) - - Gem ....................................: - - (X) - - 6 756 (X) 6 756 Teton ..................................: - - (X) - - 5 220 (X) 3 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 28. Land Used for Vegetables and Vegetables Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ : 2022 : 2017 :------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Land used for vegetables (see text) : : Land used for vegetables (see text) : :-------------------------------------------------------: Vegetables :-------------------------------------------------------: Vegetables : Harvested : Irrigated : harvested : Harvested : Irrigated : harvested :-------------------------------------------------------: (see text) :-------------------------------------------------------: (see text) Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : (acres) : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : (acres) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 1,235 334,276 1,232 334,263 337,060 1,209 353,680 1,061 345,668 354,278 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 53 748 53 748 753 59 764 52 718 769 Adams ..................................: 3 1 3 1 (D) 5 4 5 4 7 Bannock ................................: 53 1,724 53 1,724 1,742 13 (D) 10 (D) (D) Bear Lake ..............................: 7 5 7 5 5 3 3 3 3 3 Benewah ................................: 4 8 4 7 11 5 5 5 5 5 Bingham ................................: 75 55,371 75 55,371 55,374 108 68,110 100 65,879 68,113 Blaine .................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) (D) Bonner .................................: 42 33 40 (D) 37 84 59 39 35 70 Bonneville .............................: 59 16,021 59 16,021 16,030 39 16,732 37 (D) 16,732 Boundary ...............................: 10 6 9 (D) 6 15 28 7 2 28 : Butte ..................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) (D) 8 1,068 8 1,068 1,068 Camas ..................................: 3 2 3 2 2 5 2 5 2 3 Canyon .................................: 190 21,601 190 21,601 22,531 140 19,003 127 18,030 19,314 Caribou ................................: 24 6,688 24 6,688 6,688 11 6,565 11 6,210 6,565 Cassia .................................: 40 30,531 40 30,531 30,531 38 28,995 37 (D) 28,995 Clark ..................................: - - - - - 3 195 3 195 195 Clearwater .............................: 7 5 7 4 5 19 8 7 4 15 Custer .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - (D) Elmore .................................: 9 5,262 9 5,262 5,262 17 13,160 17 13,160 13,160 Franklin ...............................: 11 (D) 11 (D) (D) 6 (D) 6 (D) (D) : Fremont ................................: 56 20,313 56 20,313 20,313 71 21,409 69 (D) 21,410 Gem ....................................: 38 643 38 643 654 35 121 34 (D) 125 Gooding ................................: 27 3,991 27 3,991 4,088 15 3,899 15 3,820 3,899 Idaho ..................................: 5 4 5 3 5 6 8 4 (D) 8 Jefferson ..............................: 32 19,613 32 19,613 19,616 41 31,060 39 (D) 31,062 Jerome .................................: 27 10,370 27 10,370 10,370 16 8,553 16 8,408 8,554 Kootenai ...............................: 39 38 39 37 49 37 132 25 127 135 Latah ..................................: 32 42 32 38 44 18 28 9 8 34 Lemhi ..................................: 16 11 16 11 12 15 12 9 5 13 Lincoln ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) (D) : Madison ................................: 83 26,216 83 26,216 26,216 98 33,033 98 32,464 33,035 Minidoka ...............................: 35 44,628 35 44,628 45,079 54 29,174 53 (D) 29,174 Nez Perce ..............................: 15 13 15 12 15 17 9 15 (D) 10 Oneida .................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) (D) Owyhee .................................: 16 (D) 16 (D) (D) 19 1,135 19 1,133 1,136 Payette ................................: 62 6,513 62 6,513 7,247 28 4,766 28 4,586 4,778 Power ..................................: 27 38,419 27 38,419 38,419 39 43,848 38 (D) 43,848 Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (D) 9 (D) 1 (D) 1 Teton ..................................: 19 3,321 19 3,321 3,321 22 4,322 22 4,041 4,324 Twin Falls .............................: 74 9,962 74 9,962 10,375 54 11,465 53 (D) 11,595 : Valley .................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) (D) 3 4 3 (D) (D) Washington .............................: 13 2,057 13 2,057 2,109 23 1,324 23 1,323 1,364 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VEGETABLES HARVESTED : FOR SALE : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 1,235 337,060 1,071 191,873 346 145,188 1,209 354,278 976 204,072 402 150,206 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 53 753 53 752 4 1 59 769 58 607 3 162 Adams ............................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 5 7 5 7 - - Bannock ..........................................: 53 1,742 53 (D) 18 (D) 13 (D) 13 (D) 5 (D) Bear Lake ........................................: 7 5 7 5 - - 3 3 3 3 - - Benewah ..........................................: 4 11 4 (D) 3 (D) 5 5 5 (D) 1 (D) Bingham ..........................................: 75 55,374 47 32,312 45 23,062 108 68,113 84 42,463 49 25,650 Blaine ...........................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) - - 4 (D) 3 2 1 (D) Bonner ...........................................: 42 37 41 (D) 2 (D) 84 70 81 69 3 2 Bonneville .......................................: 59 16,030 53 8,919 16 7,111 39 16,732 38 12,384 9 4,349 Boundary .........................................: 10 6 10 (D) 1 (D) 15 28 12 (D) 3 (D) : Butte ............................................: 5 (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) 8 1,068 6 (D) 2 (D) Camas ............................................: 3 2 3 2 - - 5 3 5 3 - - Canyon ...........................................: 190 22,531 173 17,497 43 5,034 140 19,314 100 9,724 57 9,590 Caribou ..........................................: 24 6,688 21 (D) 7 (D) 11 6,565 11 (D) 3 (D) Cassia ...........................................: 40 30,531 26 14,543 26 15,988 38 28,995 21 12,509 32 16,486 Clark ............................................: - - - - - - 3 195 - - 3 195 Clearwater .......................................: 7 5 7 5 3 (Z) 19 15 6 5 13 10 Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Elmore ...........................................: 9 5,262 5 1,658 5 3,604 17 13,160 12 1,476 8 11,684 Franklin .........................................: 11 (D) 11 (D) 1 (D) 6 (D) 6 (D) - - : Fremont ..........................................: 56 20,313 52 17,139 11 3,174 71 21,410 67 19,426 23 1,984 Gem ..............................................: 38 654 38 377 7 277 35 125 33 (D) 2 (D) Gooding ..........................................: 27 4,088 24 (D) 5 (D) 15 3,899 11 1,388 5 2,511 Idaho ............................................: 5 5 5 5 - - 6 8 6 8 - - Jefferson ........................................: 32 19,616 27 18,278 8 1,338 41 31,062 40 29,648 7 1,414 Jerome ...........................................: 27 10,370 24 1,581 7 8,789 16 8,554 7 (D) 11 (D) Kootenai .........................................: 39 49 38 (D) 4 (D) 37 135 35 133 5 2 Latah ............................................: 32 44 32 44 - - 18 34 18 34 - - Lemhi ............................................: 16 12 12 12 4 (Z) 15 13 15 13 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 293 : Madison ..........................................: 83 26,216 77 19,608 27 6,609 98 33,035 95 30,950 20 2,085 Minidoka .........................................: 35 45,079 27 15,482 17 29,597 54 29,174 28 11,116 33 18,058 Nez Perce ........................................: 15 15 15 15 - - 17 10 15 (D) 2 (D) Oneida ...........................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Owyhee ...........................................: 16 (D) 15 406 3 (D) 19 1,136 16 117 6 1,019 Payette ..........................................: 62 7,247 45 3,543 19 3,704 28 4,778 14 745 21 4,033 Power ............................................: 27 38,419 16 21,026 17 17,393 39 43,848 13 12,929 34 30,920 Shoshone .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 9 1 9 1 - - Teton ............................................: 19 3,321 15 1,765 8 1,556 22 4,324 21 3,383 8 941 Twin Falls .......................................: 74 10,375 52 6,572 26 3,803 54 11,595 36 2,202 26 9,393 : Valley ...........................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) Washington .......................................: 13 2,109 12 1,049 6 1,060 23 1,364 22 (D) 2 (D) : ARTICHOKES, EXCLUDING : JERUSALEM : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : ASPARAGUS, BEARING AGE : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 45 87 45 87 - - 21 (D) 21 (D) - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 9 1 9 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bonneville .......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Boundary .........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Latah ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 5 4 5 4 - - - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ASPARAGUS, BEARING AGE - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : BEANS, LIMA : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - : Counties : : Kootenai .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : BEANS, SNAP (BUSH AND POLE) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 195 5,237 183 4,470 19 767 126 593 113 86 14 507 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 4 5 4 5 - - 8 10 8 10 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 11 3 11 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bear Lake ........................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Benewah ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Bingham ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 10 1 10 1 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bonner ...........................................: 17 2 17 2 - - 22 5 19 4 3 2 Bonneville .......................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) Boundary .........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - : Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 25 844 25 844 - - 12 145 9 (D) 3 (D) Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gooding ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Jefferson ........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 8 2 8 2 - - Jerome ...........................................: 8 288 8 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 14 2 14 (D) 1 (D) 9 1 9 1 - - Latah ............................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 11 1 11 1 - - Lemhi ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Minidoka .........................................: 4 4 4 4 - - - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: 9 1 9 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Payette ..........................................: 9 146 9 146 - - - - - - - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 28 3,491 18 3,146 12 345 10 422 4 (D) 6 (D) Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - : BEETS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 91 25 91 25 - - 95 15 94 (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 6 1 6 1 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bear Lake ........................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 10 2 10 2 - - Blaine ...........................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 3 1 3 1 - - Bonner ...........................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - 15 2 15 2 - - Bonneville .......................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) Boundary .........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 5 (D) 5 (D) - - : Canyon ...........................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 5 1 5 1 - - Caribou ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Clearwater .......................................: - - - - - - 3 1 3 1 - - Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BEETS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Jerome ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 5 1 5 1 - - Latah ............................................: 14 2 14 2 - - 9 1 9 1 - - Lemhi ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 5 1 5 1 - - Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : BROCCOLI : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 58 12 58 12 - - 35 6 35 6 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 6 1 6 1 - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: - - - - - - 3 1 3 1 - - : Gem ..............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 11 1 11 1 - - 4 1 4 1 - - Latah ............................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: - - - - - - 4 1 4 1 - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : BRUSSELS SPROUTS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 17 2 17 2 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Latah ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : CABBAGE, CHINESE (NAPPA, : BOK CHOY, ETC.) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 22 4 22 4 - - 19 2 19 2 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 12 1 12 1 - - Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Latah ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Oneida ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : Teton ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : CABBAGE, HEAD : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 66 16 64 16 3 (Z) 52 (D) 52 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CABBAGE, HEAD - Con. : : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ..........................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 6 1 6 1 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 21 3 21 3 - - Bonneville .......................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - - - - - - - : Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 4 1 4 (D) 1 (D) 4 1 4 1 - - Latah ............................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : CABBAGE, MUSTARD : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) : Counties : : Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Latah ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Teton ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : CANTALOUPES AND MUSKMELONS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 59 (D) 59 (D) - - 65 39 65 (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 6 1 6 1 - - Bannock ..........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: - - - - - - 3 1 3 (D) 1 (D) Bonner ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 6 1 6 1 - - Bonneville .......................................: 4 2 4 2 - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 19 6 19 6 - - 10 3 10 3 - - Clearwater .......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 2 4 2 - - Gem ..............................................: 9 6 9 6 - - 4 1 4 1 - - : Gooding ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 1 4 1 - - Payette ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 5 2 5 2 - - 7 3 7 3 - - Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : CARROTS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 235 3,668 217 2,834 18 834 94 106 89 18 7 88 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 9 3 9 3 - - Bannock ..........................................: 13 1 13 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bear Lake ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bingham ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 7 2 7 2 - - Blaine ...........................................: 4 2 4 2 - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 11 3 11 3 - - Bonneville .......................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 5 1 5 1 - - Canyon ...........................................: 52 1,345 49 (D) 3 (D) 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CARROTS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 3 1 3 (D) 2 (D) Gem ..............................................: 12 277 7 1 5 276 - - - - - - Gooding ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: 8 321 8 321 - - 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Kootenai .........................................: 18 3 18 3 - - 10 2 10 2 - - Latah ............................................: 18 3 18 3 - - 8 1 8 1 - - : Lemhi ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madison ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Minidoka .........................................: 12 (D) 12 (D) - - - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 6 20 6 20 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 9 76 9 76 - - 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Teton ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Twin Falls .......................................: 23 539 16 (D) 7 (D) 5 2 5 2 - - Valley ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: 3 (D) - - 3 (D) - - - - - - : CAULIFLOWER : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 21 5 21 5 - - 21 3 21 3 - - : Counties : : Bannock ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Boundary .........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: - - - - - - 4 1 4 1 - - Latah ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : CELERY : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 15 2 15 2 - - 8 1 8 1 - - : Counties : : Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Latah ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : CHICORY : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) : Counties : : Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - (X) (X) Bonner ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Latah ............................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : COLLARDS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 19 76 18 (D) 1 (D) 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- COLLARDS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Latah ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : CUCUMBERS AND PICKLES : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 151 40 147 39 4 1 96 18 95 (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 18 4 18 4 - - 5 4 5 4 - - Bannock ..........................................: 13 (D) 13 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bear Lake ........................................: - - - - - - 3 1 3 1 - - Benewah ..........................................: 3 2 3 2 - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 10 2 10 2 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 14 2 14 2 - - 14 1 14 1 - - Bonneville .......................................: 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Canyon ...........................................: 13 11 13 11 - - 5 2 5 2 - - Caribou ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Clearwater .......................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 8 1 6 (D) 2 (D) 3 1 3 1 - - Gooding ..........................................: 7 4 7 4 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Idaho ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 8 (D) 8 (D) - - : Jerome ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 7 1 7 1 - - Latah ............................................: 22 2 22 2 - - 5 1 5 1 - - Lemhi ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 7 (D) 7 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Oneida ...........................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : Teton ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Valley ...........................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : DAIKON : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Latah ............................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : EGGPLANT : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 34 7 34 7 - - 24 3 24 3 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 10 1 10 1 - - 6 1 6 1 - - Bannock ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Latah ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Washington .......................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ESCAROLE AND ENDIVE : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 11 1 11 1 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : Counties : : Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Canyon ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Latah ............................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : GARLIC : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 132 52 128 49 10 3 96 63 93 63 3 (Z) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 11 2 11 2 - - 5 1 5 1 - - Adams ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ..........................................: 4 3 1 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 11 2 10 (D) 1 (D) Blaine ...........................................: 4 18 4 18 - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 19 3 19 (D) 1 (D) 28 5 28 5 - - Bonneville .......................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 4 1 4 1 - - Boundary .........................................: 4 1 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 2 3 2 - - Camas ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : Canyon ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 3 1 3 (Z) 3 (Z) 5 1 5 1 - - Fremont ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 11 6 11 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 7 1 7 1 - - - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 11 3 10 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Latah ............................................: 14 4 14 4 - - 7 1 7 1 - - : Lemhi ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - - - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 6 42 6 42 - - Nez Perce ........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Shoshone .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 4 1 4 1 - - Twin Falls .......................................: 3 4 3 4 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : GINGER ROOT : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: - - - - - - 6 1 6 1 - - : Counties : : Bonner ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Latah ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : GOURDS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 10 2 9 (D) 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Canyon ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Latah ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : HERBS, FRESH CUT : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 93 190 93 190 (X) (X) 63 11 63 11 (X) (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) 10 2 10 2 (X) (X) Adams ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) Bannock ..........................................: 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Bingham ..........................................: 6 1 6 1 (X) (X) 6 1 6 1 (X) (X) Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bonner ...........................................: 12 1 12 1 (X) (X) 14 1 14 1 (X) (X) Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Boundary .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Canyon ...........................................: 17 140 17 140 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HERBS, FRESH CUT - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Gem ..............................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) 6 1 6 1 (X) (X) Idaho ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Kootenai .........................................: 14 1 14 1 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Latah ............................................: 10 1 10 1 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Lemhi ............................................: 4 2 4 2 (X) (X) 3 2 3 2 (X) (X) Nez Perce ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Payette ..........................................: 3 40 3 40 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Teton ............................................: 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) (X) : Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Valley ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : HONEYDEW MELONS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 17 3 17 3 - - 14 3 14 3 (X) (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - (X) (X) Bingham ..........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Bonner ...........................................: - - - - - - 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) Canyon ...........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Gem ..............................................: 5 2 5 2 - - - - - - (X) (X) Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - (X) (X) Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - (X) (X) Oneida ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - (X) (X) : Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) : HORSERADISH : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : KALE : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 54 158 54 (D) 1 (D) 43 5 43 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Adams ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 17 2 17 2 - - Bonneville .......................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - - - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Fremont ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) : Gem ..............................................: 5 1 5 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Latah ............................................: 9 2 9 2 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 7 152 7 152 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : LETTUCE, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 142 681 142 681 (X) (X) 101 76 101 76 (X) (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 9 2 9 2 (X) (X) 9 51 9 51 (X) (X) Adams ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) Bannock ..........................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bingham ..........................................: 6 1 6 1 (X) (X) 6 3 6 3 (X) (X) Blaine ...........................................: 4 6 4 6 (X) (X) 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) Bonner ...........................................: 14 2 14 2 (X) (X) 32 8 32 8 (X) (X) Bonneville .......................................: 4 2 4 2 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LETTUCE, ALL - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Boundary .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Camas ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Canyon ...........................................: 9 2 9 2 (X) (X) 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Fremont ..........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Gem ..............................................: 8 1 8 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Jefferson ........................................: 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) : Jerome ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Kootenai .........................................: 20 5 20 5 (X) (X) 7 2 7 2 (X) (X) Latah ............................................: 10 3 10 3 (X) (X) 9 1 9 1 (X) (X) Lemhi ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Nez Perce ........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Payette ..........................................: 27 651 27 651 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Power ............................................: 3 2 3 2 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Teton ............................................: 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) 5 6 5 6 (X) (X) Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) 8 1 8 1 (X) (X) Valley ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : LETTUCE, HEAD : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 57 49 57 49 (X) (X) 40 22 40 22 (X) (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Bannock ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bingham ..........................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) (X) 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bonner ...........................................: 6 1 6 1 (X) (X) 12 1 12 1 (X) (X) Bonneville .......................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Canyon ...........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) (X) Gem ..............................................: 6 1 6 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Kootenai .........................................: 7 1 7 1 (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Latah ............................................: 8 1 8 1 (X) (X) 4 (D) 4 (D) (X) (X) : Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Payette ..........................................: 4 42 4 42 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Teton ............................................: 4 1 4 1 (X) (X) 5 (D) 5 (D) (X) (X) Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - (X) (X) 7 (D) 7 (D) (X) (X) : LETTUCE, LEAF : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 114 546 114 546 (X) (X) 74 32 74 32 (X) (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 9 1 9 1 (X) (X) 9 17 9 17 (X) (X) Adams ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bingham ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) 6 1 6 1 (X) (X) Blaine ...........................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) (X) (X) 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) Bonner ...........................................: 12 1 12 1 (X) (X) 18 6 18 6 (X) (X) Bonneville .......................................: 4 1 4 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Boundary .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Camas ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Canyon ...........................................: 6 2 6 2 (X) (X) 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) (X) : Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Fremont ..........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Gem ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Jefferson ........................................: 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Jerome ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Kootenai .........................................: 17 4 17 4 (X) (X) 6 (D) 6 (D) (X) (X) Latah ............................................: 5 1 5 1 (X) (X) 7 (D) 7 (D) (X) (X) : Lemhi ............................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Nez Perce ........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Payette ..........................................: 24 525 24 525 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Teton ............................................: 4 1 4 1 (X) (X) 5 3 5 3 (X) (X) Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Valley ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : LETTUCE, ROMAINE : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 32 87 32 87 (X) (X) 30 22 30 22 (X) (X) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LETTUCE, ROMAINE - Con. : : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Adams ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Bonner ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 8 1 8 1 (X) (X) Bonneville .......................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Canyon ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Gem ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Idaho ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) : Jerome ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Kootenai .........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Latah ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) Payette ..........................................: 6 84 6 84 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) Teton ............................................: - - - - (X) (X) 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) (X) Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - (X) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) Valley ...........................................: - - - - (X) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) (X) : MUSTARD GREENS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 22 2 21 (D) 1 (D) 15 4 15 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Bonneville .......................................: 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Boundary .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Latah ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 5 2 5 2 - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : OKRA : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 11 1 11 1 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Latah ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - : ONIONS, DRY : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 201 14,522 191 12,596 23 1,926 165 12,452 148 10,341 24 2,111 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 10 621 10 621 - - 9 (D) 9 (D) - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 14 2 14 2 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bear Lake ........................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Benewah ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 7 1 7 1 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 13 2 13 2 - - Bonneville .......................................: 10 1 10 1 - - - - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Canyon ...........................................: 73 9,922 69 8,831 15 1,092 60 9,700 47 8,125 17 1,575 Clearwater .......................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 3 40 3 40 - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - 6 1 6 1 - - Gooding ..........................................: 7 206 7 206 - - - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 17 2 17 2 - - 6 1 6 1 - - Latah ............................................: 10 2 10 2 - - 6 1 6 1 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ONIONS, DRY - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Lemhi ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madison ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Minidoka .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 4 2 4 2 - - Payette ..........................................: 14 1,469 9 (D) 5 (D) 9 895 7 642 4 253 Teton ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: 7 1,141 7 (D) 2 (D) 18 1,357 17 (D) 2 (D) : ONIONS, GREEN : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 72 10 71 (D) 1 (D) 38 5 36 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 10 1 10 1 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 10 2 10 2 - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 12 1 11 (D) 1 (D) 8 1 8 1 - - Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Camas ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : Gem ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: 15 2 15 2 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Latah ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : PARSLEY : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 29 3 29 3 - - 16 2 14 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 11 1 11 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Gem ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Latah ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : PARSNIPS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Bingham ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : PEAS, CHINESE (SUGAR AND SNOW) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 56 712 56 712 - - 42 1,193 34 135 9 1,058 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 9 1 9 1 - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEAS, CHINESE (SUGAR AND SNOW) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Canyon ...........................................: 14 512 14 512 - - 12 533 8 (D) 5 (D) Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - - - - - - - Kootenai .........................................: 10 1 10 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Latah ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 5 654 1 (D) 4 (D) Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : PEAS, GREEN : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 105 1,972 101 1,782 4 190 38 24 38 24 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 11 1 11 1 - - 5 1 5 1 - - Bonneville .......................................: 7 (D) 6 1 1 (D) - - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 23 1,313 23 1,313 - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fremont ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - - - - - - - : Gem ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ........................................: 6 2 6 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Latah ............................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 6 1 6 1 - - Lemhi ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 7 3 7 3 - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 7 168 7 168 - - - - - - - - : Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 7 401 5 (D) 2 (D) 3 5 3 5 - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : PEAS, SOUTHERN (COWPEAS) - : BLACKEYED, CROWDER, ETC. : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : Counties : : Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : PEPPERS, BELL (EXCLUDING : PIMIENTOS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 116 321 111 26 7 295 91 456 82 18 10 438 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 11 2 11 2 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 11 (D) 11 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 13 2 12 (D) 1 (D) 8 1 8 1 - - Bonneville .......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 17 69 16 (D) 2 (D) 19 290 12 (D) 8 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Franklin .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 8 1 8 (D) 1 (D) 15 2 15 2 - - Gooding ..........................................: 7 2 7 2 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Kootenai .........................................: 15 2 15 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEPPERS, BELL (EXCLUDING : PIMIENTOS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Latah ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Lemhi ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 5 2 5 2 - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: 3 2 3 2 - - - - - - - - : PEPPERS, OTHER THAN BELL : (INCLUDING CHILE) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 115 22 110 21 9 2 82 17 80 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 11 2 11 2 - - 12 4 12 4 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - - - - - - - Bear Lake ........................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Benewah ..........................................: 3 2 3 2 - - - - - - - - Bingham ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 6 1 5 (D) 1 (D) 8 2 8 2 - - Bonneville .......................................: 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Boundary .........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Canyon ...........................................: 21 4 21 4 3 (Z) 10 4 8 (D) 2 (D) Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 7 1 7 (D) 1 (D) 9 1 9 1 - - Gooding ..........................................: 7 2 7 2 - - - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Kootenai .........................................: 18 3 16 (D) 2 (D) 7 1 7 1 - - Latah ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 1 4 1 - - Payette ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Twin Falls .......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 4 1 4 1 - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : POTATOES : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 529 301,157 400 161,609 220 139,548 684 335,042 500 190,521 317 144,521 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 21 156 20 (D) 1 (D) Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 28 (D) 28 (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) 5 (D) 1 (D) Benewah ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 71 55,359 43 32,298 41 23,061 87 67,297 64 (D) 47 (D) Blaine ...........................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner ...........................................: 6 (D) 5 1 1 (D) 29 4 29 4 - - Bonneville .......................................: 33 15,932 26 8,837 13 7,095 33 16,708 33 (D) 8 (D) Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Butte ............................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 8 1,068 6 (D) 2 (D) : Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 20 3,566 15 656 6 2,910 36 7,326 10 724 33 6,602 Caribou ..........................................: 24 (D) 21 (D) 7 (D) 10 (D) 10 (D) 3 (D) Cassia ...........................................: 30 30,040 14 14,437 24 15,604 34 (D) 17 (D) 32 16,486 Clark ............................................: - - - - - - 3 195 - - 3 195 Clearwater .......................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Elmore ...........................................: 9 5,262 5 1,658 5 3,604 14 13,069 9 (D) 8 (D) Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fremont ..........................................: 51 20,309 47 17,135 11 3,174 68 21,397 64 19,415 22 1,983 Gem ..............................................: 10 9 10 9 - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Gooding ..........................................: 7 3,789 3 (D) 5 (D) 8 3,805 4 1,294 5 2,511 Jefferson ........................................: 13 19,577 10 (D) 6 (D) 26 30,961 25 (D) 5 (D) Jerome ...........................................: 7 9,756 4 (D) 6 (D) 13 8,511 5 (D) 10 (D) Kootenai .........................................: 15 2 15 2 - - 12 (D) 12 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- POTATOES - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Latah ............................................: 7 2 7 2 - - 10 1 10 1 - - Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 1 4 1 - - Lincoln ..........................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 293 Madison ..........................................: 76 25,899 70 19,291 27 6,609 93 33,021 90 30,936 20 2,085 Minidoka .........................................: 20 43,274 11 (D) 17 (D) 42 28,861 16 (D) 33 (D) Nez Perce ........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 11 1,115 8 (D) 4 (D) Payette ..........................................: 15 2,911 2 (D) 13 (D) 16 3,619 1 (D) 15 (D) Power ............................................: 27 38,409 16 21,016 17 17,393 39 43,848 13 12,929 34 30,920 : Teton ............................................: 15 3,306 11 1,750 8 1,556 19 4,302 18 3,361 8 941 Twin Falls .......................................: 15 5,799 10 2,565 7 3,233 23 9,520 15 1,961 15 7,559 Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : PUMPKINS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 155 294 149 278 19 16 176 1,243 176 1,202 11 41 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) - - 23 129 23 (D) 2 (D) Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 16 (D) 16 (D) 11 10 4 49 4 25 4 24 Bear Lake ........................................: - - - - - - 3 1 3 1 - - Bingham ..........................................: 10 4 7 (D) 3 (D) 9 782 9 782 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 13 9 12 (D) 1 (D) 18 2 18 2 - - Bonneville .......................................: 10 36 9 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Boundary .........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 16 77 16 77 - - 14 74 14 (D) 1 (D) : Caribou ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Cassia ...........................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Clearwater .......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Franklin .........................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 4 19 4 19 - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 4 9 4 (D) 1 (D) Gem ..............................................: 8 17 8 17 - - 15 11 15 11 - - Gooding ..........................................: - - - - - - 3 7 3 7 - - Jefferson ........................................: 6 17 6 17 - - 8 43 8 (D) 2 (D) : Jerome ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 20 4 19 (D) 1 (D) 9 6 9 (D) 1 (D) Latah ............................................: 13 3 13 3 - - 6 7 6 7 - - Lemhi ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 8 7 8 7 - - Madison ..........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 4 2 4 2 - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 8 4 8 - - Payette ..........................................: 4 11 4 11 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : Teton ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 6 45 6 45 - - 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - : RADISHES : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 73 1,917 70 1,917 4 (Z) 45 6 45 6 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 7 1 7 1 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 7 1 7 1 - - Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 15 434 15 434 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 7 199 7 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Latah ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 16 973 16 973 - - - - - - - - : Teton ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 1 3 1 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RADISHES - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 7 1 7 1 - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : RHUBARB : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 40 5 33 4 8 1 15 2 12 2 3 (Z) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Benewah ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Boundary .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Gem ..............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - - - - - - - Jerome ...........................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Lemhi ............................................: 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) - - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : SPINACH : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 46 6 44 (D) 2 (D) 55 8 55 8 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 8 1 8 1 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 7 1 7 1 - - Boundary .........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Camas ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jerome ...........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 3 1 3 1 - - Latah ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Lemhi ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 5 2 5 2 - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 7 1 7 1 - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : SQUASH (INCLUDING ZUCCHINI) : (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 174 85 170 (D) 7 (D) 195 148 178 142 19 6 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 27 46 27 46 - - Adams ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bannock ..........................................: 11 3 11 3 - - 3 1 3 1 - - Bear Lake ........................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Benewah ..........................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 (Z) - - Bingham ..........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 5 2 5 2 - - Blaine ...........................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Bonner ...........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 20 4 20 4 - - Bonneville .......................................: 18 2 18 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 5 1 2 (D) 3 (D) : Canyon ...........................................: 15 7 15 7 3 (Z) 12 13 12 13 - - Cassia ...........................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 15 5 2 (D) 13 (D) Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 2 4 2 - - Fremont ..........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SQUASH (INCLUDING ZUCCHINI) : (SEE TEXT) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Gem ..............................................: 7 3 7 3 - - 18 4 18 4 - - Gooding ..........................................: 7 2 7 2 - - 3 (D) 3 3 - - Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ........................................: 5 2 5 2 - - 4 1 4 1 - - Jerome ...........................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 16 3 16 3 - - 6 3 6 3 2 (D) Latah ............................................: 20 4 20 4 - - 8 7 8 7 - - Lemhi ............................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Madison ..........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 8 4 8 4 - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Nez Perce ........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Payette ..........................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Shoshone .........................................: - - - - - - 8 (D) 8 (D) - - Teton ............................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 5 2 5 2 - - 11 6 11 6 - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: - - - - - - 3 2 3 2 - - : SWEET CORN (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 221 3,282 210 2,939 19 344 155 2,121 146 921 15 1,200 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 15 47 15 47 - - 20 58 20 (D) 2 (D) Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 5 1 5 1 - - Bannock ..........................................: 22 (D) 20 (D) 2 (D) 10 49 10 (D) 1 (D) Bingham ..........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 4 4 4 4 - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 12 3 12 3 - - Bonneville .......................................: 10 33 10 33 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 62 2,786 57 (D) 13 (D) 22 870 17 441 5 429 Cassia ...........................................: 8 (D) 6 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Franklin .........................................: 6 9 6 9 - - 5 14 5 14 - - Fremont ..........................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Gem ..............................................: 14 44 14 44 - - 10 (D) 10 (D) - - Gooding ..........................................: 7 8 7 8 - - 4 18 4 18 - - Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 5 4 5 4 - - Jefferson ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 47 3 (D) 2 (D) Jerome ...........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 16 6 16 6 - - 10 4 10 4 - - : Latah ............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 6 1 6 1 - - Lemhi ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lincoln ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - 3 2 3 2 - - Minidoka .........................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 5 3 5 3 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Owyhee ...........................................: 4 5 4 5 - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 6 77 6 77 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 10 79 10 79 - - 15 957 12 198 3 759 : Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Washington .......................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : SWEET POTATOES : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 10 1 10 1 - - - - - - - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ..............................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - - - - - - - : TOMATOES IN THE OPEN : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 215 62 207 59 16 3 211 72 196 65 20 7 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 28 8 27 7 4 1 37 23 37 23 - - Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 5 1 5 1 - - Bannock ..........................................: 21 3 19 2 4 (Z) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ..........................................: 3 2 3 2 - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 5 3 5 3 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOMATOES IN THE OPEN - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Blaine ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: 13 2 12 (D) 1 (D) 25 4 25 4 - - Bonneville .......................................: 17 4 16 (D) 1 (D) 5 1 5 1 - - Boundary .........................................: 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Butte ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 22 11 22 11 - - 23 6 21 6 3 (Z) Caribou ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .......................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 16 6 3 (D) 13 (D) Custer ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Franklin .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Fremont ..........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ..............................................: 13 4 13 (D) 2 (D) 16 3 16 3 - - Gooding ..........................................: 7 2 7 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Idaho ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 4 3 4 3 - - Jefferson ........................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 10 4 10 4 - - Jerome ...........................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 4 1 4 1 - - Kootenai .........................................: 19 3 18 (D) 1 (D) 8 1 8 (D) 2 (D) Latah ............................................: 9 3 9 3 - - 11 2 11 2 - - : Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Madison ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 12 1 12 1 - - 5 3 5 3 - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 6 4 6 (D) 2 (D) Payette ..........................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Power ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - Shoshone .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .......................................: 8 1 8 1 - - 10 1 10 1 - - : TURNIP GREENS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 9 1 9 1 - - : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Idaho ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Latah ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : TURNIPS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 47 1,578 44 978 3 600 26 213 23 3 3 210 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 5 1 5 1 - - Bannock ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Blaine ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner ...........................................: - - - - - - 5 1 5 1 - - Canyon ...........................................: 18 1,348 15 748 3 600 3 210 - - 3 210 Idaho ............................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 11 1 11 1 - - - - - - - - Latah ............................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Owyhee ...........................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Payette ..........................................: 4 203 4 203 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Valley ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : WATERCRESS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) : Counties : : Bingham ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) (X) - - - - (X) (X) : WATERMELONS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 74 108 74 108 - - 72 133 72 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 10 13 10 13 - - 14 44 14 (D) 2 (D) Adams ............................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 29. Vegetables, Potatoes, and Melons Harvested for Sale: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Harvested for : Harvested for : : Harvested for : Harvested for : Total harvested : fresh market : processing : Total harvested : fresh market : processing :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WATERMELONS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Bannock ..........................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bingham ..........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonneville .......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 18 (D) 18 (D) - - 8 (D) 8 (D) - - Cassia ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Elmore ...........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Franklin .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 2 4 2 - - Gem ..............................................: 8 10 8 10 - - 11 15 11 15 - - Gooding ..........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 42 4 42 - - Jerome ...........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Kootenai .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 6 1 6 1 - - Lemhi ............................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Minidoka .........................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ........................................: 9 2 9 2 - - - - - - - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee ...........................................: - - - - - - 5 1 5 1 - - Payette ..........................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Twin Falls .......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 7 3 7 3 - - Washington .......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : OTHER VEGETABLES : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................: 37 698 35 (D) 2 (D) 55 82 52 82 4 1 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................: 7 (D) 7 (D) - - 4 22 4 22 - - Bannock ..........................................: - - - - - - 3 2 3 2 - - Bingham ..........................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bonner ...........................................: 5 1 5 1 - - 12 8 12 8 - - Bonneville .......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Boundary .........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Butte ............................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon ...........................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai .........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 10 3 8 (D) 2 (D) Latah ............................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 4 3 4 3 - - : Lemhi ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Nez Perce ........................................: - - - - - - 10 2 10 2 - - Oneida ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Owyhee ...........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ..........................................: 3 53 3 53 - - - - - - - - Teton ............................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .......................................: 3 7 3 7 - - 6 1 6 1 - - Valley ...........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Washington .......................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 30. Land in Orchards: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Irrigated : Total : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 567 5,523 565 (D) 576 5,708 392 5,139 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 43 94 43 94 51 113 37 77 Adams ..................................: 8 10 8 10 6 4 6 3 Bannock ................................: 38 37 38 37 14 22 10 15 Bear Lake ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - Benewah ................................: 7 2 7 2 9 9 9 9 Bingham ................................: 10 20 10 20 13 17 11 (D) Blaine .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Boise ..................................: 5 5 5 5 4 6 2 (D) Bonner .................................: 35 45 35 44 68 66 33 44 Bonneville .............................: 14 21 14 21 13 19 9 13 : Boundary ...............................: 26 31 24 (D) 20 22 14 13 Butte ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - Canyon .................................: 90 4,065 90 4,065 89 4,053 71 3,752 Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Cassia .................................: - - - - 4 2 4 2 Clearwater .............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Custer .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Elmore .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 4 47 4 47 Franklin ...............................: 16 19 16 19 11 11 7 6 Fremont ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) : Gem ....................................: 60 309 60 309 46 276 41 254 Gooding ................................: 9 15 9 15 9 8 8 (D) Idaho ..................................: 21 23 21 23 6 23 6 23 Jefferson ..............................: 11 10 11 10 9 6 3 5 Jerome .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 8 18 8 18 Kootenai ...............................: 38 29 38 28 46 77 16 19 Latah ..................................: 22 40 22 40 23 28 8 14 Lemhi ..................................: 10 17 10 16 15 11 8 8 Lewis ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - Madison ................................: 5 7 5 7 7 7 5 (D) : Minidoka ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 6 3 4 (D) Nez Perce ..............................: 14 34 14 34 20 116 9 95 Oneida .................................: 4 3 4 3 5 (D) 4 (D) Owyhee .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 12 29 10 (D) Payette ................................: 33 519 33 519 20 574 17 545 Power ..................................: - - - - 3 2 3 2 Shoshone ...............................: 4 4 4 4 2 (D) 1 (D) Teton ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 16 75 16 75 15 53 11 38 Washington .............................: 6 47 6 47 5 63 5 63 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NONCITRUS, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 554 5,483 448 5,003 270 480 552 5,634 411 4,996 281 638 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 43 (D) 31 73 23 (D) 47 102 28 67 27 35 Adams ..................................: 8 (D) 6 (D) 6 5 6 4 6 (D) 2 (D) Bannock ................................: 38 37 31 31 20 7 12 (D) 8 11 6 (D) Bear Lake ..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Benewah ................................: 7 2 6 1 4 1 9 (D) 9 5 3 (D) Bingham ................................: 10 (D) 9 19 5 (D) 13 17 11 16 4 1 Blaine .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Boise ..................................: 5 5 - - 5 5 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Bonner .................................: 35 44 21 31 23 13 68 66 40 31 38 34 Bonneville .............................: 14 21 11 15 6 6 13 19 9 11 10 8 : Boundary ...............................: 24 (D) 11 (D) 15 13 19 (D) 10 (D) 16 11 Butte ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Canyon .................................: 87 4,057 81 3,845 30 212 84 4,033 68 3,775 39 258 Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 2 - - 4 2 Clearwater .............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Custer .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Elmore .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 4 47 3 (D) 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 13 (D) 13 9 8 (D) 9 (D) 7 5 4 (D) Fremont ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) : Gem ....................................: 57 308 51 244 31 64 44 275 32 243 26 32 Gooding ................................: 9 15 7 10 8 5 9 7 7 6 5 2 Idaho ..................................: 21 (D) 18 14 9 (D) 6 23 6 11 3 12 Jefferson ..............................: 11 10 9 7 4 3 9 6 9 6 - - Jerome .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 8 18 8 18 - - Kootenai ...............................: 37 23 31 20 13 4 44 (D) 35 (D) 25 32 Latah ..................................: 22 (D) 19 29 11 (D) 23 (D) 15 23 12 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 10 (D) 6 13 7 (D) 15 11 14 (D) 2 (D) Lewis ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Madison ................................: 5 7 5 7 - - 7 7 7 (D) 2 (D) : Minidoka ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 6 3 6 3 - - Nez Perce ..............................: 14 (D) 14 31 2 (D) 20 115 17 89 14 26 Oneida .................................: 4 3 4 2 3 1 5 (D) 3 (D) 5 3 Owyhee .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 8 13 8 13 - - Payette ................................: 32 (D) 23 447 12 (D) 20 574 19 (D) 5 (D) Power ..................................: - - - - - - 3 2 - - 3 2 Shoshone ...............................: 4 4 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Teton ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 16 (D) 14 63 9 (D) 14 (D) 13 47 7 (D) Washington .............................: 6 47 5 44 3 2 5 63 3 48 5 15 : APPLES : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 320 1,936 245 1,695 140 241 371 2,256 258 1,942 191 313 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 25 17 16 15 10 3 24 24 17 23 11 2 Adams ..................................: 8 7 6 (D) 6 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Bannock ................................: 34 14 27 12 10 2 9 15 5 (D) 6 (D) Bear Lake ..............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Benewah ................................: 4 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Bingham ................................: 8 16 8 15 3 1 9 16 7 (D) 4 (D) Blaine .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Boise ..................................: 5 5 - - 5 5 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Bonner .................................: 25 33 14 26 14 7 64 44 35 17 35 28 Bonneville .............................: 13 12 10 10 5 2 11 16 9 10 8 6 : Boundary ...............................: 16 10 8 4 10 7 18 8 10 5 15 3 Butte ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Canyon .................................: 28 (D) 27 (D) 12 (D) 34 1,542 21 (D) 18 (D) Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Custer .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Elmore .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 10 6 10 6 - - 8 8 7 (D) 3 (D) Fremont ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Gem ....................................: 23 (D) 20 (D) 8 4 28 59 17 49 15 10 Gooding ................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Idaho ..................................: 15 11 8 4 9 6 4 15 4 5 3 11 Jefferson ..............................: 6 7 6 (D) 2 (D) 9 6 9 6 - - Jerome .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 6 (D) 6 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 19 10 13 (D) 12 (D) 33 37 22 11 21 26 Latah ..................................: 18 16 15 12 7 4 15 16 11 13 8 3 Lemhi ..................................: 7 8 5 6 5 2 15 5 13 (D) 2 (D) Lewis ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Madison ................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - 6 (D) 6 5 2 (D) : Minidoka ...............................: - - - - - - 6 3 6 3 - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 9 6 8 (D) 6 (D) Oneida .................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) 3 (D) 16 350 16 (D) 4 (D) Power ..................................: - - - - - - 3 1 - - 3 1 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- APPLES - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Shoshone ...............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Teton ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 9 10 7 8 5 2 10 11 9 10 5 2 Washington .............................: 4 20 4 (D) 1 (D) 4 28 3 (D) 4 (D) : APRICOTS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 77 68 49 52 34 16 75 49 55 44 24 5 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Adams ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Bannock ................................: 5 1 1 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Bingham ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Blaine .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Boise ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner .................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonneville .............................: 4 (D) - - 4 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Boundary ...............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) 3 (Z) Canyon .................................: 14 32 10 31 4 1 16 28 14 (D) 2 (D) : Custer .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 18 11 9 (D) 11 (D) 10 7 7 5 4 2 Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 4 3 4 3 3 (Z) Jefferson ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: - - - - - - 6 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Latah ..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Lemhi ..................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) Madison ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 5 1 5 1 - - 6 1 6 1 - - : Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Payette ................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 3 2 3 (D) 2 (D) 6 2 6 2 - - Washington .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : CHERRIES, SWEET : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 149 624 99 571 67 54 173 572 107 540 86 32 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 6 3 6 3 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 8 2 2 (D) 6 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner .................................: 13 2 7 (D) 8 (D) 33 8 19 5 15 3 Bonneville .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Boundary ...............................: 12 3 4 1 8 2 8 3 3 2 5 1 Canyon .................................: 21 (D) 16 (D) 6 1 31 (D) 16 (D) 15 2 Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Elmore .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : Franklin ...............................: 7 (D) 7 (D) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Gem ....................................: 25 124 16 83 14 41 18 72 14 60 10 12 Idaho ..................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 5 3 5 2 3 1 Jefferson ..............................: 5 1 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: 14 5 13 (D) 1 (D) 25 9 15 6 14 3 Latah ..................................: 7 17 5 12 7 5 11 8 9 7 4 1 Lemhi ..................................: 5 1 2 (D) 3 (D) 5 2 3 (D) 2 (D) Nez Perce ..............................: 3 1 3 1 - - 7 1 5 (D) 2 (D) Oneida .................................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) 4 1 2 (D) 4 (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - : Payette ................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Power ..................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 5 11 4 10 3 1 5 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : CHERRIES, TART : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 61 15 46 (D) 21 (D) 68 12 38 (D) 33 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 5 (D) 2 (D) 3 (Z) 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) Adams ..................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 5 2 5 2 - - - - - - - - Benewah ................................: 3 2 3 (D) 3 (D) - - - - - - Bingham ................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Blaine .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 11 2 5 (D) 7 (D) 7 (D) 2 (D) 7 1 Bonneville .............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Boundary ...............................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 (Z) 5 1 1 (D) 4 (D) Canyon .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 7 1 7 1 - - Caribou ................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- CHERRIES, TART - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Franklin ...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 9 2 9 2 - - 6 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 6 1 4 (D) 2 (D) Latah ..................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) - - 4 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 4 (Z) 3 (D) 1 (D) Madison ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Oneida .................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Owyhee .................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 3 2 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Washington .............................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : GRAPES (INCLUDE MUSCADINE) : (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 137 1,175 122 1,114 45 61 128 1,216 91 1,106 58 111 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 12 59 12 50 5 9 19 67 8 38 15 29 Adams ..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 4 6 4 6 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Blaine .................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Bonner .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bonneville .............................: 3 1 - - 3 1 - - - - - - Boundary ...............................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Canyon .................................: 45 (D) 45 (D) 9 (D) 47 (D) 39 818 18 (D) Clearwater .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - : Elmore .................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Fremont ................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Gem ....................................: 7 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) 10 83 4 82 6 1 Gooding ................................: 6 9 6 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Idaho ..................................: 10 6 9 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Jefferson ..............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Jerome .................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 5 2 5 2 - - 6 1 6 1 - - Latah ..................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 3 1 3 1 - - Lemhi ..................................: 3 1 3 1 - - - - - - - - : Lewis ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Minidoka ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Nez Perce ..............................: 6 17 6 (D) 2 (D) 9 103 6 81 7 23 Oneida .................................: - - - - - - 4 1 2 (D) 4 (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ................................: 13 28 11 (D) 2 (D) 5 (D) 4 12 2 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 5 (D) 5 (D) 3 1 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : NECTARINES : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 34 67 16 59 21 8 30 60 19 (D) 11 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 5 1 2 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Boundary ...............................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Canyon .................................: 7 (D) 3 (D) 4 1 7 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) Gem ....................................: 10 5 4 1 7 4 6 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Nez Perce ..............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Oneida .................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : Twin Falls .............................: 3 1 3 (D) 2 (D) 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : PAWPAWS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : PEACHES, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 132 1,009 84 965 57 44 87 914 59 848 43 66 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEACHES, ALL - Con. : : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 10 2 4 1 6 2 9 3 7 (D) 2 (D) Bannock ................................: 15 5 6 4 9 2 - - - - - - Bingham ................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Blaine .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Bonneville .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Boundary ...............................: 6 3 1 (D) 5 (D) 5 3 2 (D) 4 (D) Canyon .................................: 22 (D) 15 (D) 7 3 15 (D) 13 (D) 5 9 Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) : Elmore .................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 8 2 8 2 - - 3 1 3 1 - - Gem ....................................: 19 31 10 27 11 4 14 23 7 18 9 5 Gooding ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Idaho ..................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 4 1 4 1 - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Nez Perce ..............................: 6 13 6 13 - - 7 3 6 (D) 2 (D) Oneida .................................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Payette ................................: 10 (D) 8 (D) 2 (D) 5 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 9 21 8 17 6 4 5 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : PEACHES, CLINGSTONE : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 50 69 30 66 21 3 30 (D) 20 (D) 11 3 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) 5 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) Bannock ................................: 10 3 4 2 6 1 - - - - - - Blaine .................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Boundary ...............................: 5 (D) - - 5 (D) - - - - - - Canyon .................................: 8 (D) 7 (D) 1 (D) 8 (D) 8 (D) - - Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Elmore .................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 7 1 7 1 - - - - - - - - Gem ....................................: 8 11 8 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) : Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Nez Perce ..............................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) Oneida .................................: 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) - - - - - - Payette ................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : PEACHES, FREESTONE : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 106 940 75 899 39 41 68 (D) 49 (D) 34 63 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 9 2 3 (D) 6 (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 7 2 4 2 3 (Z) - - - - - - Bingham ................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Blaine .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonneville .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Boundary ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 5 3 2 (D) 4 (D) Canyon .................................: 17 (D) 11 (D) 6 (D) 12 (D) 10 (D) 5 9 Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Franklin ...............................: 8 1 8 1 - - 3 1 3 1 - - : Gem ....................................: 19 20 10 (D) 10 (D) 14 (D) 7 (D) 9 (D) Gooding ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Idaho ..................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 4 1 4 1 - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 6 13 6 13 - - 4 (D) 4 (D) 1 (D) Oneida .................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ................................: 10 (D) 8 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - : Twin Falls .............................: 8 (D) 7 (D) 6 4 5 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : PEARS, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 183 207 122 177 87 30 143 186 91 145 71 41 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 13 4 5 3 8 2 10 2 2 (D) 8 (D) Adams ..................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEARS, ALL - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Bannock ................................: 17 3 12 (D) 5 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ................................: - - - - - - 3 8 3 (D) 3 (D) Bingham ................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Blaine .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Boise ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 19 3 13 2 8 2 17 5 8 (D) 12 (D) Bonneville .............................: 8 3 5 2 5 1 7 2 3 (D) 6 (D) Boundary ...............................: 11 2 4 1 7 1 4 3 4 (Z) 3 3 Canyon .................................: 20 (D) 16 (D) 7 2 14 (D) 12 (D) 3 (D) Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Custer .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Franklin ...............................: 8 1 - - 8 1 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 15 19 12 12 12 8 11 13 6 12 7 1 Gooding ................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Idaho ..................................: 6 5 5 3 5 2 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: 11 2 10 (D) 1 (D) 18 3 12 2 8 1 Latah ..................................: 10 3 7 2 5 1 13 2 10 (D) 5 (D) : Lemhi ..................................: 4 1 3 (D) 1 (D) 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) Madison ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Oneida .................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Payette ................................: 13 10 6 (D) 7 (D) - - - - - - Power ..................................: - - - - - - 3 1 - - 3 1 Shoshone ...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Teton ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 5 4 4 3 3 1 9 3 8 (D) 1 (D) Washington .............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : PEARS, BARTLETT : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 102 172 70 151 52 21 67 144 42 113 32 31 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 6 2 3 1 3 (Z) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Adams ..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Bannock ................................: 8 2 6 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Blaine .................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Boise ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 9 1 3 (Z) 7 1 7 3 1 (D) 6 (D) Bonneville .............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) 3 (D) 4 (D) Boundary ...............................: 5 1 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 3 Canyon .................................: 14 (D) 10 (D) 5 1 10 (D) 10 (D) 1 (D) : Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Cassia .................................: - - - - - - 4 (Z) - - 4 (Z) Clearwater .............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Custer .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Franklin ...............................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 14 19 12 (D) 11 (D) 6 10 6 (D) 1 (D) Idaho ..................................: 6 2 5 2 5 1 - - - - - - Jefferson ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: 5 1 5 1 - - 10 1 4 1 6 1 Latah ..................................: 6 2 5 2 3 (Z) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : Lemhi ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 4 1 4 1 - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Payette ................................: 8 (D) 1 (D) 7 (D) - - - - - - Power ..................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Shoshone ...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 5 3 4 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : PEARS, OTHER THAN BARTLETT : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 120 35 75 27 59 9 105 43 66 33 50 10 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 12 3 4 1 8 1 8 (D) 2 (D) 6 1 Adams ..................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Bannock ................................: 9 1 6 (D) 3 (D) - - - - - - Benewah ................................: - - - - - - 3 8 3 (D) 3 (D) Bingham ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Blaine .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 16 2 10 1 7 1 15 2 7 (D) 11 (D) Bonneville .............................: 5 (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Boundary ...............................: 7 1 1 (D) 6 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon .................................: 9 (D) 8 (D) 3 1 5 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) : Clearwater .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 7 (D) - - 7 (D) - - - - - - Gem ....................................: 4 (Z) 1 (D) 3 (D) 10 4 4 (D) 6 (D) Gooding ................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PEARS, OTHER THAN : BARTLETT - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Idaho ..................................: 6 2 5 1 5 1 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Jefferson ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: 10 1 9 (D) 1 (D) 13 2 10 2 5 1 Latah ..................................: 6 1 4 1 4 (Z) 12 (D) 10 (D) 4 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 4 (D) 3 (Z) 1 (D) 4 (Z) 3 (D) 1 (D) Madison ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Oneida .................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - - - - - - - Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Payette ................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - - - - - - - : Power ..................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Teton ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Twin Falls .............................: 3 1 3 (D) 2 (D) 8 (D) 7 (D) 1 (D) Washington .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) : PERSIMMONS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Counties : : Kootenai ...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - : PLUMCOTS, PLUOTS, AND OTHER : PLUM-APRICOT HYBRIDS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 22 10 15 (D) 9 (D) 8 (D) 2 (D) 6 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Bingham ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Bonneville .............................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Canyon .................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Gem ....................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Payette ................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : PLUMS AND PRUNES : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 158 370 92 352 77 18 120 364 86 310 43 53 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 18 3 7 (D) 11 (D) 13 3 4 (D) 9 (D) Adams ..................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Bannock ................................: 15 3 7 (D) 8 (D) 3 4 3 4 - - Benewah ................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Bingham ................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Blaine .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 17 3 11 1 9 2 13 6 11 (D) 3 (D) Bonneville .............................: 6 1 3 (Z) 4 1 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Boundary ...............................: 13 2 3 (D) 10 (D) 8 2 3 1 5 1 Canyon .................................: 18 197 11 196 7 2 13 (D) 13 (D) - - : Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Custer .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Gem ....................................: 5 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 7 16 5 16 3 1 Gooding ................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 16 3 14 (D) 2 (D) 14 6 11 5 5 1 Latah ..................................: 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) 6 1 3 (D) 3 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 4 1 3 (D) 1 (D) 4 1 4 1 - - Madison ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Nez Perce ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Oneida .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 2 4 2 - - Payette ................................: 11 (D) 4 (D) 9 6 5 117 5 (D) 2 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 8 4 7 3 5 1 7 (D) 6 (D) 2 (D) Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PLUMS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 148 344 83 327 75 17 114 349 82 (D) 40 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 17 (D) 6 (D) 11 (D) 12 (D) 3 (D) 9 (D) Adams ..................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Bannock ................................: 15 3 7 (D) 8 (D) 3 4 3 4 - - Benewah ................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Bingham ................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Blaine .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bonner .................................: 14 2 8 (D) 9 (D) 12 (D) 9 (D) 3 (D) Bonneville .............................: 6 1 3 (Z) 4 1 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Boundary ...............................: 13 (D) 3 (D) 10 (D) 7 (D) 3 1 4 (D) Canyon .................................: 17 (D) 10 (D) 7 2 13 182 13 182 - - : Caribou ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Custer .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Gem ....................................: 5 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 7 (D) 5 (D) 3 (D) Gooding ................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Kootenai ...............................: 13 2 11 (D) 2 (D) 11 5 10 (D) 3 (D) Latah ..................................: 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) 6 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) Lemhi ..................................: 4 1 3 (D) 1 (D) 4 1 4 1 - - Madison ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Nez Perce ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Oneida .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Owyhee .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 2 4 2 - - Payette ................................: 11 (D) 4 (D) 9 6 5 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 6 3 6 (D) 3 (D) 7 (D) 6 2 2 (D) Washington .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : PRUNES : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 25 26 20 25 7 1 21 15 15 (D) 6 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner .................................: 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Boundary ...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Canyon .................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 6 1 6 1 - - 5 1 3 (D) 2 (D) Latah ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Lemhi ..................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Payette ................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 3 1 2 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : OTHER NONCITRUS FRUIT (SEE : TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) : Counties : : Boundary ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : NUTS, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 52 40 37 23 24 17 67 74 32 29 36 45 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 8 11 7 (D) 1 (D) Adams ..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Bannock ................................: - - - - - - 4 (D) - - 4 (D) Benewah ................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Bingham ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Boise ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bonner .................................: 5 1 2 (D) 4 (D) 6 1 2 (D) 4 (D) Boundary ...............................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Canyon .................................: 8 8 5 (D) 3 (D) 12 20 7 (D) 5 (D) Clearwater .............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - : Franklin ...............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Gem ....................................: 6 1 6 1 - - 5 1 - - 5 1 Gooding ................................: - - - - - - 3 1 - - 3 1 Idaho ..................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: 6 5 6 (D) 2 (D) 7 (D) 5 (D) 2 (D) Latah ..................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Nez Perce ..............................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 7 1 5 (D) 2 (D) Owyhee .................................: - - - - - - 4 16 - - 4 16 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NUTS, ALL - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Payette ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : ALMONDS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 8 2 7 2 3 (Z) - - - - - - : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Boundary ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - : CHESTNUTS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 7 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) 6 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) : Counties : : Boise ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Boundary ...............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon .................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Latah ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Nez Perce ..............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : HAZELNUTS (FILBERTS) : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 28 10 18 5 16 5 26 21 10 4 16 17 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: - - - - - - 5 (D) 5 (D) - - Bannock ................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Bingham ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner .................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 (Z) 6 (D) 2 (D) 4 (Z) Canyon .................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Clearwater .............................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Gem ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Gooding ................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Kootenai ...............................: 6 5 6 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) - - : Latah ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Nez Perce ..............................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Owyhee .................................: - - - - - - 4 16 - - 4 16 Twin Falls .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - : PECANS, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : PECANS, IMPROVED : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) : WALNUTS, ENGLISH : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 22 19 19 16 5 3 47 29 26 8 22 21 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 7 (D) 6 2 1 (D) Adams ..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) - - - - - - Bannock ................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Bonner .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Boundary ...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Canyon .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 8 10 6 (D) 2 (D) Franklin ...............................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Gem ....................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 5 (D) - - 5 (D) Gooding ................................: - - - - - - 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 31. Fruits and Nuts: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres : Total : Bearing age acres : Nonbearing age acres :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- WALNUTS, ENGLISH - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Kootenai ...............................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 7 (D) 5 2 2 (D) Latah ..................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Lemhi ..................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - - - - - Nez Perce ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 7 1 5 (D) 2 (D) Payette ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : OTHER NUTS : : State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - Benewah ................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Kootenai ...............................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 32. Land in Berries: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Irrigated : Total : Irrigated :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ..................................: 268 207 268 207 287 243 194 164 : Counties : : Ada ....................................: 21 12 21 12 17 12 15 (D) Adams ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 5 2 5 2 Bannock ................................: 11 3 11 3 8 8 7 (D) Bear Lake ..............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Benewah ................................: 5 2 5 2 11 6 6 2 Bingham ................................: 5 4 5 4 14 3 12 (D) Bonner .................................: 29 23 29 23 59 39 29 27 Bonneville .............................: 7 13 7 13 6 (D) 4 (D) Boundary ...............................: 8 3 8 3 3 1 3 1 Camas ..................................: - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) : Canyon .................................: 26 30 26 30 32 42 25 41 Caribou ................................: - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Cassia .................................: 3 3 3 3 1 (D) - - Clearwater .............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - Custer .................................: - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Elmore .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Franklin ...............................: 6 7 6 7 5 9 5 9 Fremont ................................: 4 1 4 1 1 (D) - - Gem ....................................: 22 17 22 17 17 9 16 (D) Gooding ................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 3 (Z) 3 (Z) : Idaho ..................................: 11 7 11 7 4 4 4 4 Jefferson ..............................: 9 1 9 1 7 1 - - Jerome .................................: - - - - 4 (D) 4 (D) Kootenai ...............................: 29 45 29 45 23 37 10 10 Latah ..................................: 17 8 17 8 13 3 5 1 Lemhi ..................................: 5 1 5 1 4 15 1 (D) Lewis ..................................: - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Madison ................................: 10 4 10 4 4 2 4 2 Minidoka ...............................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ..............................: 3 2 3 2 6 2 4 (D) : Oneida .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) 7 8 7 8 Owyhee .................................: - - - - 2 (D) - - Payette ................................: 12 4 12 4 10 7 9 (D) Shoshone ...............................: 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - - Teton ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - Twin Falls .............................: 7 3 7 3 11 9 8 8 Washington .............................: 5 2 5 2 2 (D) 2 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 33. Berries: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age : Nonbearing age : Total : Bearing age : Nonbearing age :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ARONIA BERRIES : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : Counties : : Bonner .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Canyon .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) : BLACKBERRIES AND DEWBERRIES : (INCLUDING MARIONBERRIES) : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 71 31 68 23 10 7 82 26 54 21 29 4 : Counties : : Ada ........................................: 8 3 8 3 - - 7 (D) 5 1 3 (D) Bannock ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ....................................: - - - - - - 3 2 3 2 - - Bingham ....................................: 3 (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Bonner .....................................: - - - - - - 6 (D) 2 (D) 4 (Z) Canyon .....................................: 16 (D) 16 5 1 (D) 19 5 2 (D) 17 (D) Cassia .....................................: 3 1 3 1 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Clearwater .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ........................................: 8 6 8 (D) 1 (D) 9 2 7 (D) 2 (D) Idaho ......................................: 4 4 4 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Jefferson ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Jerome .....................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Kootenai ...................................: 5 2 5 2 - - 5 3 4 (D) 1 (D) Latah ......................................: 6 3 6 (D) 1 (D) 6 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) Lemhi ......................................: - - - - - - 3 3 3 3 - - Minidoka ...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Oneida .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 1 4 1 - - Owyhee .....................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ....................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : Shoshone ...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .................................: 4 (D) 4 1 2 (D) 8 2 8 2 - - Washington .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : BLUEBERRIES, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 64 47 51 36 19 12 74 65 50 56 27 8 : Counties : : Ada ........................................: 5 4 5 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Adams ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Benewah ....................................: 5 (D) 4 (Z) 1 (D) 6 (D) 4 1 2 (D) Bonner .....................................: 10 12 5 12 5 1 33 22 18 18 16 4 Boundary ...................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Canyon .....................................: 6 3 4 (D) 2 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Clearwater .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Elmore .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Fremont ....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Gem ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 2 3 2 - - : Idaho ......................................: 6 2 1 (D) 5 (D) - - - - - - Jefferson ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai ...................................: 15 15 15 (D) 2 (D) 11 7 7 6 4 1 Latah ......................................: 3 (D) 3 1 2 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Lemhi ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 3 3 3 - - Lewis ......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Shoshone ...................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : BLUEBERRIES, TAME : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 63 (D) 50 (D) 19 12 74 65 50 56 27 8 : Counties : : Ada ........................................: 5 4 5 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Adams ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Benewah ....................................: 5 (D) 4 (Z) 1 (D) 6 (D) 4 1 2 (D) Bonner .....................................: 10 12 5 12 5 1 33 22 18 18 16 4 Boundary ...................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Canyon .....................................: 6 (D) 4 1 2 (D) 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Elmore .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Fremont ....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Gem ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 2 3 2 - - Idaho ......................................: 6 2 1 (D) 5 (D) - - - - - - : Jefferson ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai ...................................: 15 15 15 (D) 2 (D) 11 7 7 6 4 1 Latah ......................................: 3 (D) 3 1 2 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) Lemhi ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 3 3 3 - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 33. Berries: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age : Nonbearing age : Total : Bearing age : Nonbearing age :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BLUEBERRIES, TAME - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Lewis ......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Shoshone ...................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : BLUEBERRIES, WILD : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - : Counties : : Canyon .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Clearwater .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : BOYSENBERRIES : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Counties : : Bingham ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : CURRANTS (BLACK OR RED) : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 10 2 10 2 - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : Counties : : Ada ........................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - - - - - - - Bingham ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner .....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Franklin ...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ........................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Jefferson ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Kootenai ...................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : ELDERBERRIES : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 24 3 17 3 7 1 5 (D) 1 (D) 4 (Z) : Counties : : Ada ........................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Benewah ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Bingham ....................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - - - - - - - Bonner .....................................: 4 (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - Bonneville .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Canyon .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Gem ........................................: 5 1 1 (D) 4 (D) - - - - - - Payette ....................................: 6 1 6 1 - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .................................: 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - : GOOSEBERRIES (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : Canyon .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : MULBERRIES (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : Counties : : Bingham ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) : RASPBERRIES, ALL : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 131 82 122 78 15 4 149 98 127 82 42 16 : Counties : : Ada ........................................: 8 2 8 2 - - 12 4 12 4 5 1 Adams ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Bannock ....................................: 8 (D) 8 (D) - - 8 (D) 5 (D) 3 (D) Bear Lake ..................................: 2 (D) - - 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 6 (D) 6 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 33. Berries: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Total : Bearing age : Nonbearing age : Total : Bearing age : Nonbearing age :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RASPBERRIES, ALL - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Bingham ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 9 2 9 2 - - Bonner .....................................: 12 7 10 6 3 1 29 11 24 7 14 4 Bonneville .................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - 6 (D) 4 (D) 2 (D) Boundary ...................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon .....................................: 8 7 8 (D) 1 (D) 8 4 7 (D) 1 (D) Caribou ....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Cassia .....................................: 3 2 3 2 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Clearwater .................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Elmore .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Franklin ...................................: 6 (D) 6 (D) - - 5 9 5 9 - - : Fremont ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Gem ........................................: 7 (D) 6 1 1 (D) 5 (D) 4 (Z) 1 (D) Gooding ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Idaho ......................................: 4 (D) 1 (D) 3 1 - - - - - - Jefferson ..................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 3 1 3 1 - - Kootenai ...................................: 15 21 15 21 - - 13 21 12 (D) 2 (D) Latah ......................................: 13 3 13 (D) 2 (D) 5 1 5 (D) 2 (D) Lemhi ......................................: - - - - - - 4 6 4 6 - - Madison ....................................: 9 (D) 9 (D) - - 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Minidoka ...................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - : Nez Perce ..................................: 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - 3 (Z) 3 (Z) - - Oneida .....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 5 5 4 (D) 1 (D) Payette ....................................: 3 (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) 8 (D) 2 (D) 6 3 Shoshone ...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - - - - - - - Teton ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Twin Falls .................................: 5 2 5 (D) 2 (D) 5 6 4 4 4 2 Washington .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - : STRAWBERRIES : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 78 32 72 30 10 1 97 36 80 31 25 5 : Counties : : Ada ........................................: 4 2 4 2 - - 9 4 9 4 - - Adams ......................................: - - - - - - 3 (D) 3 (D) - - Bannock ....................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Benewah ....................................: 4 (D) 4 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Bingham ....................................: 4 1 4 1 - - 7 1 3 1 4 (Z) Bonner .....................................: 10 1 8 (D) 2 (D) 24 5 22 (D) 6 (D) Bonneville .................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Boundary ...................................: 2 (D) 2 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Camas ......................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Canyon .....................................: 9 8 6 (D) 3 (D) 4 (D) 3 (D) 1 (D) : Cassia .....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Clearwater .................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - - - - - - - Fremont ....................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) Gem ........................................: 6 6 6 6 - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Idaho ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 2 Jefferson ..................................: 7 1 7 1 - - 4 (Z) 4 (Z) - - Jerome .....................................: - - - - - - 2 (D) - - 2 (D) Kootenai ...................................: 11 7 11 (D) 1 (D) 11 (D) 8 2 3 (D) Latah ......................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 4 1 1 (D) 3 (D) Lemhi ......................................: 5 (D) 5 (D) - - 3 3 3 3 - - : Madison ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Nez Perce ..................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - Oneida .....................................: - - - - - - 6 2 6 2 - - Payette ....................................: 1 (D) 1 (D) - - 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Twin Falls .................................: 2 (D) 1 (D) 1 (D) 4 (D) 4 (D) - - Washington .................................: 3 (D) 3 (D) 3 (Z) - - - - - - : OTHER BERRIES (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ......................................: 6 6 6 6 - - 5 8 1 (D) 4 (D) : Counties : : Bonner .....................................: 3 3 3 3 - - - - - - - - Canyon .....................................: 3 3 3 3 - - 3 (D) - - 3 (D) Custer .....................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) - - 1 (D) Kootenai ...................................: - - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) - - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 34. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Sq. ft. under : : Value of sales : : Sq. ft. under : : : glass or other :Acres in the :-------------------------------: : glass or other :Acres in the Geographic area : Farms : protection : open : Farms : Dollars : Farms : protection : open ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BEDDING/GARDEN PLANTS, CUT FLOWERS AND CUT : FLORIST GREENS, FOLIAGE PLANTS, : POTTED FLOWERING PLANTS, AND OTHER : FLORICULTURE AND BEDDING CROPS, TOTAL : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 319 2,331,210 302 319 25,465,355 243 2,362,189 82 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 31 250,917 26 31 2,956,037 43 (D) 26 Adams ............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - Bannock ..........................................................: 19 27,784 8 19 487,536 6 38,438 (D) Bear Lake ........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) - Benewah ..........................................................: 5 1,396 - 5 4,160 1 (D) - Bingham ..........................................................: 15 250,043 8 15 722,388 11 113,643 (D) Blaine ...........................................................: 5 18,000 21 5 811,935 6 (D) (D) Boise ............................................................: 5 472,040 - 5 (D) 2 (D) - Bonner ...........................................................: 23 218,272 17 23 2,775,093 42 137,238 13 Bonneville .......................................................: 6 158,436 (D) 6 1,457,827 3 65,075 - : Boundary .........................................................: 9 8,780 22 9 246,480 10 12,052 5 Butte ............................................................: 4 (D) 2 4 80,900 - - - Camas ............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Canyon ...........................................................: 41 104,379 25 41 1,472,534 15 46,980 9 Caribou ..........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - Cassia ...........................................................: 4 (D) 2 4 57,000 2 (D) - Custer ...........................................................: - - - - - 3 416 - Franklin .........................................................: 5 (D) 1 5 139,050 4 16,400 - Fremont ..........................................................: 10 15,160 3 10 241,400 3 (D) (D) Gem ..............................................................: 13 13,084 7 13 96,751 4 24,620 (D) : Idaho ............................................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 1 - (D) Jefferson ........................................................: 13 11,458 1 13 89,208 4 (D) - Jerome ...........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 7 (D) (D) Kootenai .........................................................: 17 33,776 9 17 796,009 18 31,632 7 Latah ............................................................: 19 25,364 10 19 (D) 12 57,610 (D) Lemhi ............................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) - - - Madison ..........................................................: 4 36,720 - 4 262,280 3 19,700 - Minidoka .........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 8,006 3 (D) - Nez Perce ........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 4 140,250 (D) Owyhee ...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) - : Payette ..........................................................: 5 9,256 3 5 95,981 1 (D) (D) Power ............................................................: 3 7,200 - 3 30,000 - - - Shoshone .........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - Teton ............................................................: 26 79,656 82 26 1,359,288 8 15,650 2 Twin Falls .......................................................: 13 176,380 16 13 1,268,740 15 207,558 (D) Valley ...........................................................: 6 13,100 (D) 6 22,000 4 3,964 (D) Washington .......................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - : BEDDING/GARDEN PLANTS - ANNUALS, HERBACEOUS : PERENNIALS, VEGETABLE PLANTS : (INCLUDING HANGING BASKETS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 224 1,996,936 82 224 20,825,741 169 1,965,175 28 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 15 (D) 6 15 2,410,102 24 (D) (D) Adams ............................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - Bannock ..........................................................: 12 (D) (D) 12 (D) 6 (D) (D) Bear Lake ........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) - Benewah ..........................................................: 3 (D) - 3 (D) 1 (D) - Bingham ..........................................................: 12 250,043 2 12 692,908 6 110,077 - Blaine ...........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 4 (D) - Boise ............................................................: 5 472,040 - 5 (D) 2 (D) - Bonner ...........................................................: 16 207,434 4 16 2,468,035 30 130,030 7 Bonneville .......................................................: 5 (D) (D) 5 (D) 3 65,075 - : Boundary .........................................................: 7 4,980 4 7 44,480 6 (D) 1 Butte ............................................................: 4 (D) 2 4 80,900 - - - Camas ............................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Canyon ...........................................................: 26 57,588 (D) 26 720,599 7 26,730 (D) Caribou ..........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - Cassia ...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) - Franklin .........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 3 12,600 - Fremont ..........................................................: 10 15,040 2 10 240,500 2 (D) - Gem ..............................................................: 12 13,084 5 12 80,066 3 (D) - Idaho ............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - : Jefferson ........................................................: 12 (D) (D) 12 (D) 4 (D) - Jerome ...........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 5 (D) (D) Kootenai .........................................................: 15 33,166 7 15 785,386 15 20,576 7 Latah ............................................................: 15 21,698 (D) 15 282,399 12 32,727 (D) Lemhi ............................................................: 3 (D) - 3 (D) - - - Madison ..........................................................: 4 (D) - 4 (D) 3 (D) - Minidoka .........................................................: - - - - - 3 (D) - Nez Perce ........................................................: - - - - - 3 78,750 - Owyhee ...........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Payette ..........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - : Power ............................................................: 3 7,200 - 3 30,000 - - - Shoshone .........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) - Teton ............................................................: 18 59,320 28 18 1,034,744 3 (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Sq. ft. under : : Value of sales : : Sq. ft. under : : : glass or other :Acres in the :-------------------------------: : glass or other :Acres in the Geographic area : Farms : protection : open : Farms : Dollars : Farms : protection : open ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BEDDING/GARDEN PLANTS - ANNUALS, HERBACEOUS : PERENNIALS, VEGETABLE PLANTS : (INCLUDING HANGING BASKETS) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Twin Falls .......................................................: 8 37,680 (D) 8 362,188 11 (D) (D) Valley ...........................................................: 6 13,100 (D) 6 22,000 3 (D) - : CUT FLOWERS AND CUT FLORIST GREENS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 120 54,024 131 120 1,847,222 54 17,132 34 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 23 710 21 23 (D) 14 (D) 13 Adams ............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Bannock ..........................................................: 8 (D) (D) 8 19,654 1 (D) - Benewah ..........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - Bingham ..........................................................: 5 - 5 5 29,480 3 (D) (D) Blaine ...........................................................: 3 18,000 (D) 3 (D) - - - Bonner ...........................................................: 7 (D) 13 7 (D) 8 (D) 4 Bonneville .......................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - Boundary .........................................................: 3 3,800 18 3 202,000 3 - (D) Canyon ...........................................................: 13 (D) 14 13 104,165 7 (D) (D) : Cassia ...........................................................: 3 - 2 3 (D) - - - Franklin .........................................................: 3 - (D) 3 (D) - - - Fremont ..........................................................: 3 120 (Z) 3 900 1 - (D) Gem ..............................................................: 3 - 2 3 16,685 1 (D) (D) Idaho ............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Jefferson ........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - Jerome ...........................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Kootenai .........................................................: 4 (D) 1 4 6,968 4 (D) 1 Latah ............................................................: 10 2,000 9 10 (D) 2 (D) (D) Lemhi ............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - : Minidoka .........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Nez Perce ........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 1 - (D) Payette ..........................................................: 4 (D) 3 4 (D) 1 (D) (D) Shoshone .........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Teton ............................................................: 15 19,744 11 15 147,200 5 (D) (D) Twin Falls .......................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Valley ...........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) : FOLIAGE PLANTS, INDOOR (INCLUDING HANGING : BASKETS) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 25 56,728 3 25 411,436 24 125,702 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 3 (D) - 3 (D) 1 (D) - Bannock ..........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) - Bonner ...........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 1 (D) - Boundary .........................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) (D) Canyon ...........................................................: 9 3,150 (D) 9 18,840 - - - Caribou ..........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - Custer ...........................................................: - - - - - 3 416 - Franklin .........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Jerome ...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) - Kootenai .........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - : Latah ............................................................: 3 1,041 (D) 3 6,096 4 (D) (D) Nez Perce ........................................................: - - - - - 3 52,500 - Twin Falls .......................................................: 5 (D) - 5 (D) 3 5,700 - Valley ...........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - : POTTED FLOWERING PLANTS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 55 222,690 61 55 2,313,290 34 227,074 10 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 3 (D) - 3 (D) 7 (D) (D) Bannock ..........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Bingham ..........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Bonner ...........................................................: 6 (D) 1 6 223,200 9 (D) (D) Canyon ...........................................................: 18 42,710 3 18 (D) - - - Jerome ...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Kootenai .........................................................: 4 (D) 1 4 3,655 4 6,200 - Latah ............................................................: 3 625 (D) 3 (D) 4 21,579 (D) Madison ..........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 1 (D) - Minidoka .........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - : Nez Perce ........................................................: - - - - - 3 9,000 - Owyhee ...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Teton ............................................................: 8 (D) 42 8 (D) - - - Twin Falls .......................................................: 7 (D) (D) 7 (D) 4 (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Sq. ft. under : : Value of sales : : Sq. ft. under : : : glass or other :Acres in the :-------------------------------: : glass or other :Acres in the Geographic area : Farms : protection : open : Farms : Dollars : Farms : protection : open ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER FLORICULTURE AND BEDDING CROPS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 10 832 25 10 67,666 19 27,106 (D) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: - - - - - 8 4,920 2 Bannock ..........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - Bingham ..........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) - Blaine ...........................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Bonner ...........................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Bonneville .......................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Canyon ...........................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) 2 (D) - Franklin .........................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Idaho ............................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) Teton ............................................................: 2 (D) - 2 (D) - - - : Twin Falls .......................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Washington .......................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - : NURSERY STOCK CROPS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 232 504,524 5,242 230 74,525,574 211 495,117 4,297 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 18 (D) 146 18 6,338,894 24 (D) 389 Adams ............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Bannock ..........................................................: 13 - 10 13 167,300 1 (D) - Bear Lake ........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Benewah ..........................................................: 4 (D) 1 4 580 2 (D) (D) Bingham ..........................................................: 3 (D) (D) 3 (D) 5 411 1 Blaine ...........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 5 - (D) Boise ............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 1 - (D) Bonner ...........................................................: 16 2,600 242 16 (D) 14 (D) 187 Bonneville .......................................................: 11 (D) 113 11 (D) 14 - 149 : Boundary .........................................................: 19 - 1,262 19 8,683,076 23 - 1,416 Butte ............................................................: 4 - 2 4 (D) 1 - (D) Camas ............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 2 - (D) Canyon ...........................................................: 30 29,400 799 30 13,835,561 18 (D) 440 Cassia ...........................................................: 3 81,000 - 3 324,000 4 52,500 (D) Clearwater .......................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 2 (D) - Custer ...........................................................: - - - - - 3 - 4 Franklin .........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 1 - (D) Fremont ..........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 3 - (D) Gem ..............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 2 - (D) : Gooding ..........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Idaho ............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 2 - (D) Jefferson ........................................................: 8 (D) 6 8 63,068 6 - 12 Jerome ...........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Kootenai .........................................................: 25 11,400 28 23 (D) 24 16,300 103 Latah ............................................................: 19 88,529 (D) 19 3,763,140 17 70,929 549 Lemhi ............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Lincoln ..........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Madison ..........................................................: 11 1,380 38 11 (D) 3 - 5 Minidoka .........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) 9 (D) (D) : Nez Perce ........................................................: 5 (D) 1 5 (D) 3 (D) (D) Owyhee ...........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Payette ..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Power ............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Teton ............................................................: 13 1,500 1,617 13 13,908,858 7 - 282 Twin Falls .......................................................: 9 - 150 9 2,277,800 4 - 75 Valley ...........................................................: 3 (D) 3 3 (D) 4 9,732 (D) : AQUATIC PLANTS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 5 10,000 (D) 5 72,500 1 - (D) : Counties : : Boise ............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Madison ..........................................................: 4 10,000 - 4 (D) - - - Nez Perce ........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) : BULBS, CORMS, RHIZOMES, AND TUBERS - DRY : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 15 9,140 5 15 (D) 14 - 9 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) 3 - (Z) Bannock ..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Bear Lake ........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Bingham ..........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Bonner ...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 - (D) Canyon ...........................................................: 4 (D) 1 4 3,700 1 - (D) Caribou ..........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Sq. ft. under : : Value of sales : : Sq. ft. under : : : glass or other :Acres in the :-------------------------------: : glass or other :Acres in the Geographic area : Farms : protection : open : Farms : Dollars : Farms : protection : open ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- BULBS, CORMS, RHIZOMES, AND TUBERS - DRY - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Idaho ............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Jefferson ........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) - - - Kootenai .........................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) Lincoln ..........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) - - - Teton ............................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Washington .......................................................: - - - - - 4 - 4 : CUTTINGS, SEEDLINGS, LINERS, AND PLUGS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 21 22,329 7 21 578,727 23 90,085 256 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Bannock ..........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Bingham ..........................................................: 3 - 1 3 295 - - - Boise ............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - Bonner ...........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 2 (D) (D) Bonneville .......................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Boundary .........................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 3 - 253 Canyon ...........................................................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 1 (D) - Fremont ..........................................................: 3 30 (Z) 3 (D) - - - Kootenai .........................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) - - - : Latah ............................................................: 5 (D) 1 5 (D) 10 19,440 2 Nez Perce ........................................................: - - - - - 1 (D) - Owyhee ...........................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Teton ............................................................: 1 (D) - 1 (D) 1 (D) - Twin Falls .......................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) : FLOWER SEEDS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 4 (D) (D) 4 (D) 7 (D) 493 : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 2 - (D) 2 (D) 2 - (D) Bingham ..........................................................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) Canyon ...........................................................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - Elmore ...........................................................: - - - - - 1 - (D) Latah ............................................................: 1 - (D) 1 (D) - - - Lewis ............................................................: - - - - - 2 - (D) : VEGETABLE SEEDS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 19 25,891 (X) 19 105,036 160 6,800 (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 7 - (X) Benewah ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 - (X) Bingham ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Blaine ...........................................................: 3 13,800 (X) 3 60,000 - - (X) Bonneville .......................................................: - - (X) - - 1 - (X) Butte ............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Canyon ...........................................................: - - (X) - - 66 (D) (X) Elmore ...........................................................: - - (X) - - 1 - (X) Gem ..............................................................: - - (X) - - 3 - (X) Jefferson ........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) : Jerome ...........................................................: - - (X) - - 13 - (X) Latah ............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 5 (D) (X) Lemhi ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Lincoln ..........................................................: - - (X) - - 1 - (X) Madison ..........................................................: - - (X) - - 1 - (X) Minidoka .........................................................: - - (X) - - 11 - (X) Owyhee ...........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 - (X) Payette ..........................................................: - - (X) - - 21 - (X) Teton ............................................................: 3 1,500 (X) 3 3,000 2 (D) (X) Twin Falls .......................................................: 3 78 (X) 3 156 22 - (X) : VEGETABLE TRANSPLANTS TO FARM FIELDS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 26 74,667 (X) 26 86,961 24 18,051 (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 6 7,510 (X) Bannock ..........................................................: 6 60,000 (X) 6 48,000 1 - (X) Benewah ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Blaine ...........................................................: - - (X) - - 3 3,000 (X) Bonner ...........................................................: 5 9,252 (X) 5 24,697 2 (D) (X) Boundary .........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Canyon ...........................................................: 4 910 (X) 4 3,364 - - (X) Kootenai .........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Latah ............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 3 (D) (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Sq. ft. under : : Value of sales : : Sq. ft. under : : : glass or other :Acres in the :-------------------------------: : glass or other :Acres in the Geographic area : Farms : protection : open : Farms : Dollars : Farms : protection : open ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VEGETABLE TRANSPLANTS TO FARM FIELDS - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Madison ..........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Teton ............................................................: 3 60 (X) 3 144 2 (D) (X) Twin Falls .......................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 1 - (X) : SOD HARVESTED OR INTENDED FOR SALE IN : FUTURE YEARS (SEE TEXT) : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 24 (X) 3,414 24 19,191,890 (NA) (X) (NA) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: - (X) - - - (NA) (X) (NA) Bannock ..........................................................: - (X) - - - (NA) (X) (NA) Bonneville .......................................................: 2 (X) (D) 2 (D) (NA) (X) (NA) Canyon ...........................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (X) (NA) Caribou ..........................................................: - (X) - - - (NA) (X) (NA) Cassia ...........................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (X) (NA) Franklin .........................................................: 2 (X) (D) 2 (D) (NA) (X) (NA) Madison ..........................................................: 10 (X) 723 10 2,335,940 (NA) (X) (NA) Minidoka .........................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (X) (NA) Oneida ...........................................................: - (X) - - - (NA) (X) (NA) : Power ............................................................: 1 (X) (D) 1 (D) (NA) (X) (NA) Twin Falls .......................................................: 6 (X) 804 6 6,914,700 (NA) (X) (NA) : TOTAL GREENHOUSE VEGETABLES AND FRESH : CUT HERBS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 196 548,966 (X) 196 2,172,371 115 356,096 (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 8 (D) (X) 8 (D) 10 33,816 (X) Adams ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Bannock ..........................................................: 19 75,614 (X) 19 81,826 6 49,718 (X) Bear Lake ........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Benewah ..........................................................: 7 3,195 (X) 7 6,238 1 (D) (X) Bingham ..........................................................: 7 5,420 (X) 7 22,261 12 42,369 (X) Blaine ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 4 11,400 (X) Bonner ...........................................................: 12 30,390 (X) 12 239,174 20 31,462 (X) Bonneville .......................................................: 11 79,440 (X) 11 435,384 9 15,207 (X) Boundary .........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) : Butte ............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Camas ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 6 9,800 (X) Canyon ...........................................................: 20 167,410 (X) 20 389,523 4 88,000 (X) Caribou ..........................................................: 7 5,280 (X) 7 13,518 - - (X) Cassia ...........................................................: 3 3,744 (X) 3 7,862 1 (D) (X) Clearwater .......................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Custer ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Franklin .........................................................: 3 4,032 (X) 3 17,538 - - (X) Fremont ..........................................................: 4 260 (X) 4 1,176 3 (D) (X) Gem ..............................................................: 10 4,580 (X) 10 8,776 1 (D) (X) : Gooding ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Idaho ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Jefferson ........................................................: 7 7,551 (X) 7 36,287 - - (X) Jerome ...........................................................: 3 12,000 (X) 3 210,000 4 6,266 (X) Kootenai .........................................................: 12 6,654 (X) 12 27,742 4 2,240 (X) Latah ............................................................: 21 42,560 (X) 21 189,402 5 12,820 (X) Lemhi ............................................................: 3 4,240 (X) 3 (D) 2 (D) (X) Lewis ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Madison ..........................................................: 4 800 (X) 4 3,040 2 (D) (X) Oneida ...........................................................: 5 8,320 (X) 5 5,140 2 (D) (X) : Payette ..........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) - - (X) Shoshone .........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Teton ............................................................: 6 13,194 (X) 6 55,698 4 7,800 (X) Twin Falls .......................................................: 4 1,523 (X) 4 3,445 6 2,880 (X) Valley ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Washington .......................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) : GREENHOUSE TOMATOES : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 138 245,885 (X) 138 1,357,494 97 124,932 (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 7 (D) (X) 7 (D) 8 26,958 (X) Adams ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Bannock ..........................................................: 13 47,509 (X) 13 36,064 2 (D) (X) Bear Lake ........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Benewah ..........................................................: 5 491 (X) 5 890 1 (D) (X) Bingham ..........................................................: 6 (D) (X) 6 (D) 9 3,163 (X) Blaine ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 4 5,700 (X) Bonner ...........................................................: 11 24,873 (X) 11 227,510 20 22,287 (X) Bonneville .......................................................: 5 59,680 (X) 5 393,888 7 (D) (X) Boundary .........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Sq. ft. under : : Value of sales : : Sq. ft. under : : : glass or other :Acres in the :-------------------------------: : glass or other :Acres in the Geographic area : Farms : protection : open : Farms : Dollars : Farms : protection : open ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GREENHOUSE TOMATOES - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Butte ............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Camas ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 5 (D) (X) Canyon ...........................................................: 15 11,016 (X) 15 61,096 2 (D) (X) Caribou ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Clearwater .......................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Custer ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Franklin .........................................................: 3 2,016 (X) 3 13,305 - - (X) Fremont ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 3 (D) (X) Gem ..............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Gooding ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) : Idaho ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Jefferson ........................................................: 7 (D) (X) 7 (D) - - (X) Jerome ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Kootenai .........................................................: 12 3,764 (X) 12 21,246 4 (D) (X) Latah ............................................................: 15 26,880 (X) 15 154,914 5 (D) (X) Lemhi ............................................................: 3 2,240 (X) 3 (D) 2 (D) (X) Lewis ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Madison ..........................................................: 4 400 (X) 4 2,640 2 (D) (X) Oneida ...........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) Payette ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) : Shoshone .........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Teton ............................................................: 6 8,126 (X) 6 45,560 4 (D) (X) Twin Falls .......................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 6 (D) (X) Valley ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) Washington .......................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) : OTHER GREENHOUSE VEGETABLES AND FRESH : CUT HERBS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 133 303,081 (X) 133 814,877 72 231,164 (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: 6 1,778 (X) 6 (D) 10 6,858 (X) Bannock ..........................................................: 11 28,105 (X) 11 45,762 6 (D) (X) Benewah ..........................................................: 5 2,704 (X) 5 5,348 - - (X) Bingham ..........................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) 8 39,206 (X) Blaine ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 4 5,700 (X) Bonner ...........................................................: 4 5,517 (X) 4 11,664 9 9,175 (X) Bonneville .......................................................: 8 19,760 (X) 8 41,496 2 (D) (X) Boundary .........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) Butte ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Camas ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) : Canyon ...........................................................: 10 156,394 (X) 10 328,427 4 (D) (X) Caribou ..........................................................: 7 (D) (X) 7 (D) - - (X) Cassia ...........................................................: 3 3,744 (X) 3 7,862 1 (D) (X) Clearwater .......................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Custer ...........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 1 (D) (X) Franklin .........................................................: 3 2,016 (X) 3 4,233 - - (X) Fremont ..........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 3 (D) (X) Gem ..............................................................: 8 (D) (X) 8 (D) 1 (D) (X) Gooding ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Idaho ............................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) 2 (D) (X) : Jefferson ........................................................: 4 (D) (X) 4 (D) - - (X) Jerome ...........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 (D) 2 (D) (X) Kootenai .........................................................: 11 2,890 (X) 11 6,496 2 (D) (X) Latah ............................................................: 9 15,680 (X) 9 34,488 2 (D) (X) Lemhi ............................................................: 3 2,000 (X) 3 4,200 - - (X) Madison ..........................................................: 4 400 (X) 4 400 2 (D) (X) Oneida ...........................................................: 5 (D) (X) 5 (D) 2 (D) (X) Payette ..........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Shoshone .........................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 1 (D) (X) Teton ............................................................: 6 5,068 (X) 6 10,138 2 (D) (X) : Twin Falls .......................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) 2 (D) (X) Valley ...........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) : GREENHOUSE FRUITS AND BERRIES : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 16 7,786 (X) 9 1,812 11 2,082 (X) : Counties : : Ada ..............................................................: - - (X) - - 1 (D) (X) Benewah ..........................................................: 3 300 (X) 3 180 - - (X) Bingham ..........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 3 1,530 6 1,097 (X) Bonneville .......................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Canyon ...........................................................: - - (X) - - 2 (D) (X) Caribou ..........................................................: 6 6,000 (X) - - - - (X) Jefferson ........................................................: 3 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) Kootenai .........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 34. Floriculture and Bedding Crops, Nursery Crops, Propagative Materials Sold, Sod, Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection, and Mushroom Crops: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [Totals may not add due to rounding. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Sq. ft. under : : Value of sales : : Sq. ft. under : : : glass or other :Acres in the :-------------------------------: : glass or other :Acres in the Geographic area : Farms : protection : open : Farms : Dollars : Farms : protection : open ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- MUSHROOMS : : State Total : : Idaho ............................................................: 3 5,050 (X) 3 151,470 - - (X) : Counties : : Bingham ..........................................................: 1 (D) (X) 1 (D) - - (X) Teton ............................................................: 2 (D) (X) 2 (D) - - (X) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 35. Cultivated Christmas Trees: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Acres in production : Trees cut : Acres in production : Trees cut :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres :Acres irrigated : Farms : Number : Farms : Acres : Farms : Number ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...................: 101 746 153 47 15,980 120 728 52 31,811 : Counties : : Ada .....................: 1 (D) - - - 6 6 4 8 Adams ...................: 4 4 4 - - - - - - Bannock .................: 1 (D) (D) 1 (D) - - - - Benewah .................: 10 44 (D) 6 920 2 (D) 1 (D) Boise ...................: - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Bonner ..................: 14 294 5 7 (D) 35 386 14 25,987 Bonneville ..............: 12 32 28 7 108 10 28 1 (D) Boundary ................: 4 28 (D) - - 10 55 4 300 Camas ...................: 2 (D) - - - 2 (D) - - Caribou .................: 5 10 - - - - - - - : Cassia ..................: - - - - - 6 6 2 (D) Clearwater ..............: 8 25 13 6 396 6 56 5 556 Fremont .................: - - - - - 2 (D) - - Idaho ...................: - - - - - 1 (D) 1 (D) Jefferson ...............: - - - - - 5 8 2 (D) Kootenai ................: 20 171 31 13 1,712 9 78 4 1,979 Latah ...................: 11 75 36 5 (D) 12 41 8 887 Lemhi ...................: 3 9 9 - - 2 (D) - - Lincoln .................: - - - - - 2 (D) 2 (D) Madison .................: - - - - - 3 3 - - : Nez Perce ...............: - - - - - 3 6 3 9 Oneida ..................: 2 (D) (D) - - - - - - Owyhee ..................: 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) 2 (D) - - Payette .................: - - - - - 1 (D) - - Valley ..................: 2 (D) - - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 36. Short Rotation Woody Crops: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : 2022 : 2017 :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : Acres in production : Acres harvested : Acres in production : Acres harvested :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Acres :Acres irrigated: Farms : Acres : Farms : Acres :Acres irrigated: Farms : Acres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ........................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) : Counties : : Canyon .......................: - - - - - 2 (D) (D) 2 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 37. Maple Syrup: 2022 and 2017 [Not published for this State] Table 38. Commodities Raised and Delivered Under Production Contracts: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Number :: Geographic area : Farms : Number ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- EGGS, CHICKEN (DOZENS) : :: REPLACEMENT DAIRY HEIFERS - Con. : : :: : State Total : :: Counties - Con. : : :: : Idaho ..........................................................: 2 (D) :: Minidoka .......................................................: 1 (D) : :: Twin Falls .....................................................: 1 (D) Counties : :: : : :: OTHER CATTLE, SHEEP, LIVESTOCK, OR : Jerome .........................................................: 1 (D) :: POULTRY : Twin Falls .....................................................: 1 (D) :: : : :: State Total : CUSTOM FED CATTLE SHIPPED DIRECTLY : :: : FOR SLAUGHTER : :: Idaho ..........................................................: 23 (X) : :: : State Total : :: Counties : : :: : Idaho ..........................................................: 6 (D) :: Adams ..........................................................: 3 (X) : :: Bingham ........................................................: 1 (X) Counties : :: Bonneville .....................................................: 2 (X) : :: Canyon .........................................................: 1 (X) Cassia .........................................................: 2 (D) :: Caribou ........................................................: 4 (X) Elmore .........................................................: 1 (D) :: Cassia .........................................................: 1 (X) Jerome .........................................................: 1 (D) :: Elmore .........................................................: 1 (X) Owyhee .........................................................: 1 (D) :: Franklin .......................................................: 1 (X) Power ..........................................................: 1 (D) :: Fremont ........................................................: 1 (X) : :: Jefferson ......................................................: 2 (X) REPLACEMENT DAIRY HEIFERS : :: : : :: Jerome .........................................................: 3 (X) State Total : :: Payette ........................................................: 1 (X) : :: Valley .........................................................: 2 (X) Idaho ..........................................................: 12 72,645 :: : : :: GRAINS, OILSEEDS, VEGETABLES, MELONS, : Counties : :: POTATOES, AND OTHER CROPS : : :: : Canyon .........................................................: 1 (D) :: State Total : Cassia .........................................................: 1 (D) :: : Elmore .........................................................: 1 (D) :: Idaho ..........................................................: 1 (X) Gooding ........................................................: 2 (D) :: : Jefferson ......................................................: 1 (D) :: Counties : Jerome .........................................................: 3 18,276 :: : Lincoln ........................................................: 1 (D) :: Canyon .........................................................: 1 (X) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2022: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 2017: 24,995 1,304 232 756 395 288 1,177 $1,000, 2022: 4,930,153 114,641 24,775 101,309 47,334 33,811 332,628 2017: 4,397,906 104,679 19,342 73,553 55,934 37,118 303,732 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 215,507 100,386 108,186 100,805 134,092 140,878 307,704 2017: 175,951 80,276 83,372 97,293 141,605 128,882 258,056 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2022: 3,344 237 40 183 34 18 144 2017: 4,546 288 42 133 58 54 216 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2022: 2,733 181 19 146 46 42 145 2017: 3,416 262 35 139 35 36 140 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2022: 2,180 160 20 114 27 24 122 2017: 3,031 211 30 72 28 39 109 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2022: 2,925 164 37 112 39 44 98 2017: 3,294 190 34 101 45 45 126 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2022: 2,319 92 20 107 19 24 83 2017: 2,405 120 38 85 27 42 110 : $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2022: 1,815 93 15 77 29 16 95 2017: 1,691 74 2 53 48 13 104 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2022: 3,057 122 40 150 79 33 126 2017: 2,501 74 27 77 79 26 112 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2022: 2,429 70 31 88 66 25 156 2017: 2,171 46 18 77 49 12 125 $500,000 or more .......................................2022: 2,075 23 7 28 14 14 112 2017: 1,940 39 6 19 26 21 135 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ...........................farms, 2022: 18,416 863 198 785 299 173 930 2017: 20,364 994 194 562 335 212 1,015 number, 2022: 54,948 1,558 392 1,454 753 499 3,314 2017: 58,808 1,802 421 1,177 920 544 4,004 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2022: 16,968 796 192 701 266 168 775 2017: 18,705 962 190 562 313 191 922 number, 2022: 42,226 1,402 434 1,191 623 336 2,152 2017: 46,081 1,738 444 1,057 806 416 2,477 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2022: 7,400 474 80 344 64 62 328 2017: 8,269 597 72 219 77 99 351 number, 2022: 9,283 565 109 404 71 69 459 2017: 10,659 732 100 277 86 111 443 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2022: 9,749 406 122 334 176 112 379 2017: 11,040 460 140 304 217 108 534 number, 2022: 14,421 559 173 390 238 145 552 2017: 16,772 660 218 396 331 145 802 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2022: 6,684 115 72 225 134 60 390 2017: 7,196 133 46 211 160 60 429 number, 2022: 18,522 278 152 397 314 122 1,141 2017: 18,650 346 126 384 389 160 1,232 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2022: 2,292 23 1 53 32 35 87 2017: 2,732 35 4 49 59 32 118 number, 2022: 3,237 28 (D) 62 41 46 127 2017: 3,743 42 4 59 70 55 163 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2022: 2,307 84 23 83 75 26 117 2017: 2,580 82 28 83 76 20 132 number, 2022: 2,680 95 28 88 88 28 128 2017: 2,986 103 (D) 91 87 22 146 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2022: 6,213 193 70 247 151 58 292 2017: 7,454 236 99 209 181 100 350 number, 2022: 7,569 215 92 280 191 70 375 2017: 8,942 270 114 234 229 125 432 : 2022 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2017 to 2022: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 4,515 197 44 216 66 40 228 number: 6,907 232 51 252 71 83 409 Tractors ................................................farms: 3,130 136 37 123 49 32 157 number: 5,148 169 39 161 61 36 313 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 1,143 70 9 59 14 6 35 number: 1,226 72 9 68 14 6 35 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 1,237 64 17 46 24 25 47 number: 1,415 75 17 48 25 25 49 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 1,120 17 13 32 16 5 91 number: 2,507 22 13 45 22 5 229 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 318 - - 1 1 - 31 number: 418 - - (D) (D) - 38 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 250 4 2 6 - 1 24 number: 311 4 (D) 6 - (D) 25 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 636 19 8 39 8 5 35 number: 719 19 10 43 8 5 46 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2022: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 2017: 190 90 1,213 1,109 348 189 151 $1,000, 2022: 57,600 5,484 55,403 183,434 41,791 43,668 33,167 2017: 34,180 4,698 51,487 144,842 34,887 40,138 25,878 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 283,744 50,775 69,428 205,413 131,007 297,061 298,798 2017: 179,893 52,205 42,446 130,606 100,250 212,368 171,377 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2022: 7 19 109 160 48 15 15 2017: 26 21 303 194 64 22 12 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2022: 22 15 120 73 44 14 4 2017: 15 25 207 178 43 10 13 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2022: 18 20 82 64 19 9 9 2017: 16 9 207 153 45 14 26 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2022: 18 11 119 99 35 4 10 2017: 27 9 191 126 36 19 23 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2022: 20 17 117 108 47 11 4 2017: 28 4 100 125 32 24 9 : $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2022: 21 6 79 70 21 9 8 2017: 9 3 76 83 37 21 14 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2022: 38 16 107 144 39 33 20 2017: 31 14 88 101 49 27 23 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2022: 29 4 59 112 41 27 22 2017: 23 5 38 95 26 22 16 $500,000 or more .......................................2022: 30 - 6 63 25 25 19 2017: 15 - 3 54 16 30 15 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ...........................farms, 2022: 174 91 651 716 278 133 84 2017: 167 64 880 836 301 171 123 number, 2022: 698 152 1,078 1,902 646 495 284 2017: 499 104 1,373 1,986 632 543 352 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2022: 166 79 617 601 270 118 79 2017: 152 63 825 724 272 157 119 number, 2022: 516 115 1,040 1,523 648 412 226 2017: 342 104 1,294 1,570 627 432 353 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2022: 67 44 331 254 125 21 16 2017: 65 42 455 338 128 39 39 number, 2022: 80 51 388 324 173 40 18 2017: 84 61 587 436 169 47 55 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2022: 84 40 344 327 198 62 39 2017: 83 31 440 363 195 105 69 number, 2022: 115 50 497 478 320 93 45 2017: 117 35 592 475 328 144 97 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2022: 76 13 124 269 64 89 49 2017: 56 7 95 276 67 116 80 number, 2022: 321 14 155 721 155 279 163 2017: 141 8 115 659 130 241 201 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2022: 21 - 24 117 27 29 22 2017: 14 2 32 151 33 56 22 number, 2022: 46 - 26 166 38 39 33 2017: (D) (D) 34 205 44 72 31 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2022: 34 3 48 82 35 42 14 2017: 32 2 45 109 30 53 25 number, 2022: 40 5 50 87 38 47 17 2017: 43 (D) 47 112 34 64 33 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2022: 72 18 227 231 104 78 41 2017: 60 16 269 252 122 114 61 number, 2022: 108 20 270 288 126 117 60 2017: 81 18 313 306 153 148 90 : 2022 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2017 to 2022: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 52 11 109 230 41 46 30 number: 78 12 114 329 53 72 51 Tractors ................................................farms: 42 23 128 125 38 14 21 number: 59 23 140 210 50 46 36 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 10 11 57 33 13 1 4 number: 10 11 58 42 13 (D) 4 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 13 12 66 60 18 6 7 number: 13 12 69 74 24 (D) 7 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 20 - 9 40 13 10 14 number: 36 - 13 94 13 35 25 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 3 - - 22 - 4 1 number: 5 - - 32 - 6 (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 8 - 1 5 10 8 4 number: 9 - (D) 5 10 12 5 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 11 - 13 17 15 7 3 number: 20 - 13 20 17 8 3 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2022: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 2017: 2,289 411 585 68 312 267 340 $1,000, 2022: 430,845 97,440 323,304 23,865 22,279 37,562 103,406 2017: 370,688 90,036 299,564 21,776 17,090 45,141 136,229 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 186,432 244,212 583,581 356,189 81,607 159,840 364,107 2017: 161,943 219,066 512,076 320,235 54,776 169,068 400,675 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2022: 438 25 43 3 34 21 38 2017: 587 33 82 1 73 17 47 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2022: 325 30 56 8 36 30 55 2017: 299 34 51 8 67 21 80 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2022: 263 30 42 1 43 19 24 2017: 311 46 58 2 39 36 33 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2022: 313 79 67 - 43 33 25 2017: 322 53 53 6 36 34 50 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2022: 216 42 55 11 41 7 33 2017: 216 56 56 7 33 33 14 : $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2022: 190 31 43 3 25 27 10 2017: 119 35 34 6 21 14 25 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2022: 249 71 65 12 25 37 53 2017: 163 54 78 7 36 40 35 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2022: 148 38 65 16 18 41 17 2017: 113 60 63 22 3 40 24 $500,000 or more .......................................2022: 169 53 118 13 8 20 29 2017: 159 40 110 9 4 32 32 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ...........................farms, 2022: 1,859 337 491 55 176 189 219 2017: 1,808 349 500 52 228 243 302 number, 2022: 5,082 1,037 2,846 217 370 490 881 2017: 4,860 1,131 2,360 230 444 694 1,043 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2022: 1,730 257 444 53 191 198 200 2017: 1,595 284 453 50 228 221 262 number, 2022: 4,172 678 1,603 154 375 408 651 2017: 4,165 727 1,623 168 408 553 783 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2022: 934 82 161 11 89 55 102 2017: 793 79 175 11 131 101 119 number, 2022: 1,153 89 225 14 121 72 141 2017: 1,036 98 273 12 171 132 164 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2022: 984 156 225 22 129 120 106 2017: 970 164 263 40 127 127 162 number, 2022: 1,541 220 385 30 185 167 156 2017: 1,746 218 453 61 178 176 260 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2022: 468 143 273 39 41 86 84 2017: 485 162 259 39 36 104 78 number, 2022: 1,478 369 993 110 69 169 354 2017: 1,383 411 897 95 59 245 359 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2022: 162 69 99 9 13 5 27 2017: 184 84 108 7 13 11 21 number, 2022: 202 95 153 (D) 13 5 45 2017: 246 130 174 12 19 11 34 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2022: 167 47 66 8 20 39 24 2017: 185 65 78 8 19 73 30 number, 2022: 200 51 91 12 20 49 34 2017: 208 72 101 12 24 82 44 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2022: 487 99 174 26 79 94 73 2017: 449 138 234 26 105 141 97 number, 2022: 533 120 214 36 108 118 103 2017: 492 162 284 36 132 183 127 : 2022 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2017 to 2022: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 470 83 167 22 14 48 54 number: 677 117 372 27 17 49 97 Tractors ................................................farms: 372 40 89 8 16 20 24 number: 580 57 275 9 16 23 125 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 200 9 14 - 8 4 11 number: 212 9 18 - 8 4 16 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 127 8 21 4 6 12 10 number: 167 9 26 4 (D) 14 12 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 97 24 76 5 2 5 9 number: 201 39 231 5 (D) 5 97 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 31 15 32 1 3 - 4 number: 36 22 45 (D) 3 - 6 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 20 7 20 5 3 2 2 number: 30 9 28 8 3 (D) (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 36 10 25 7 5 7 8 number: 42 10 29 (D) 7 7 11 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2022: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 2017: 787 513 860 538 708 750 486 1,073 $1,000, 2022: 134,973 155,387 61,892 187,674 95,815 183,548 189,104 63,143 2017: 101,337 115,750 60,069 154,163 79,879 198,616 203,261 53,486 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 185,657 285,113 86,200 376,100 137,665 270,322 422,107 65,231 2017: 128,763 225,633 69,848 286,549 112,824 264,821 418,233 49,847 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2022: 66 73 113 61 85 98 52 185 2017: 117 52 213 101 89 103 68 247 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2022: 73 86 96 58 85 76 54 114 2017: 98 68 164 73 79 76 58 199 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2022: 63 29 96 33 43 45 35 96 2017: 94 57 97 39 86 110 40 152 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2022: 106 51 107 43 133 95 40 175 2017: 108 42 114 71 96 105 46 215 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2022: 109 56 85 39 69 88 38 106 2017: 82 57 59 46 95 55 48 73 : $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2022: 49 24 67 40 68 47 50 81 2017: 76 34 63 28 71 50 30 80 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2022: 105 84 76 101 90 75 40 134 2017: 82 84 81 60 92 85 68 56 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2022: 98 74 58 40 76 52 39 70 2017: 75 74 54 52 60 83 42 41 $500,000 or more .......................................2022: 58 68 20 84 47 103 100 7 2017: 55 45 15 68 40 83 86 10 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ...........................farms, 2022: 565 444 585 411 545 593 380 746 2017: 691 417 716 459 615 651 429 800 number, 2022: 1,389 1,780 1,090 1,576 1,386 1,932 1,801 1,207 2017: 1,731 1,527 1,241 1,694 1,514 2,032 1,696 1,341 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2022: 548 400 549 353 525 525 356 752 2017: 639 383 596 440 562 563 382 770 number, 2022: 1,270 1,115 1,029 1,246 1,168 1,457 1,330 1,218 2017: 1,602 972 1,187 1,278 1,251 1,598 1,274 1,208 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2022: 179 117 302 140 176 224 151 390 2017: 204 111 293 220 191 170 174 444 number, 2022: 219 163 355 203 215 276 197 468 2017: 279 139 370 301 243 220 232 502 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2022: 340 224 329 193 364 291 219 430 2017: 442 224 374 243 417 375 249 398 number, 2022: 502 339 462 331 502 428 386 571 2017: 668 316 557 413 595 570 426 548 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2022: 244 245 115 195 206 248 190 115 2017: 314 206 146 181 202 281 218 114 number, 2022: 549 613 212 712 451 753 747 179 2017: 655 517 260 564 413 808 616 158 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2022: 66 109 32 30 100 68 80 28 2017: 113 104 32 28 115 92 80 34 number, 2022: 74 175 33 49 123 108 112 29 2017: 127 142 38 50 152 137 107 51 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2022: 107 52 67 49 84 95 48 45 2017: 122 75 92 37 90 118 68 26 number, 2022: 112 54 80 100 90 128 54 51 2017: 131 82 111 70 106 138 81 29 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2022: 245 148 167 114 243 255 146 224 2017: 341 169 235 129 283 305 168 240 number, 2022: 278 171 194 130 309 323 182 241 2017: 377 185 259 167 362 387 205 281 : 2022 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2017 to 2022: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 133 153 91 124 123 164 111 156 number: 188 244 103 252 153 235 247 168 Tractors ................................................farms: 129 45 111 91 79 83 56 150 number: 165 56 146 217 98 140 178 175 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 31 5 66 32 27 24 7 79 number: 31 5 68 47 28 24 9 80 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 61 17 55 36 42 24 20 73 number: 65 18 70 42 49 24 26 73 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 50 24 8 53 18 40 45 16 number: 69 33 8 128 21 92 143 22 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 1 22 - 2 6 6 13 1 number: (D) 22 - (D) 6 9 17 (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 17 2 1 11 5 14 5 2 number: 17 (D) (D) 23 6 22 5 (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 44 4 10 9 19 24 9 25 number: 46 4 10 9 21 30 10 26 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2022: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 2017: 1,041 351 197 276 454 620 446 422 $1,000, 2022: 151,680 43,477 75,141 80,824 128,536 209,668 98,862 77,138 2017: 131,419 40,820 46,926 62,505 131,487 186,298 102,705 58,336 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 153,367 142,081 343,110 352,944 359,040 461,823 238,221 172,956 2017: 126,243 116,297 238,202 226,469 289,620 300,481 230,280 138,236 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2022: 124 29 17 44 51 76 53 74 2017: 213 49 37 35 58 73 94 62 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2022: 126 38 19 9 13 48 39 55 2017: 180 35 15 33 75 72 61 60 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2022: 123 14 15 9 26 33 45 54 2017: 158 42 11 16 37 72 21 40 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2022: 179 44 41 39 29 49 58 32 2017: 161 61 38 22 58 52 48 35 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2022: 120 19 15 17 35 33 47 47 2017: 92 32 10 53 50 55 26 60 : $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2022: 92 35 26 5 25 23 31 29 2017: 61 33 14 18 23 54 38 28 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2022: 73 65 22 48 40 61 50 63 2017: 63 29 21 47 23 50 35 63 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2022: 72 47 19 20 65 40 42 67 2017: 45 51 22 29 64 118 61 37 $500,000 or more .......................................2022: 80 15 45 38 74 91 50 25 2017: 68 19 29 23 66 74 62 37 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ...........................farms, 2022: 661 257 156 180 309 378 310 337 2017: 760 316 140 241 394 516 378 352 number, 2022: 1,523 687 618 657 1,453 2,329 947 964 2017: 1,856 717 507 1,013 1,635 2,556 1,232 913 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2022: 627 228 159 156 284 323 311 309 2017: 733 280 145 226 344 463 323 338 number, 2022: 1,344 526 437 530 957 1,140 706 746 2017: 1,495 655 355 713 1,053 1,554 834 724 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2022: 308 105 64 47 89 123 140 89 2017: 389 127 49 89 112 185 136 86 number, 2022: 372 120 90 54 100 187 178 106 2017: 466 136 72 108 147 255 188 116 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2022: 357 142 82 92 152 180 194 182 2017: 385 182 100 159 198 248 189 198 number, 2022: 502 228 115 177 270 274 250 251 2017: 525 303 128 230 325 339 277 264 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2022: 189 83 88 91 185 185 102 182 2017: 206 97 73 127 179 253 144 196 number, 2022: 470 178 232 299 587 679 278 389 2017: 504 216 155 375 581 960 369 344 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2022: 111 3 83 18 106 99 66 43 2017: 122 9 64 34 109 108 93 66 number, 2022: 177 3 124 25 152 132 91 57 2017: 192 9 97 45 140 136 139 90 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2022: 73 33 17 51 40 48 27 75 2017: 76 34 16 48 36 54 26 81 number, 2022: 81 39 20 69 42 50 27 85 2017: 76 36 17 67 40 68 28 84 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2022: 197 119 43 89 102 130 79 142 2017: 233 151 47 112 116 195 114 166 number, 2022: 247 157 55 119 120 163 107 160 2017: 287 186 61 134 135 234 152 187 : 2022 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2017 to 2022: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 121 41 47 38 103 112 57 65 number: 154 45 60 63 216 246 72 93 Tractors ................................................farms: 110 31 16 25 77 45 55 45 number: 119 38 17 38 146 114 60 65 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 43 21 2 4 10 12 14 12 number: 45 21 (D) 4 10 15 14 12 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 48 9 3 8 24 10 19 21 number: 48 11 (D) 8 28 13 21 22 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 25 4 12 14 50 37 25 15 number: 26 6 (D) 26 108 86 25 31 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 8 - 6 3 20 14 15 8 number: 10 - 9 3 22 17 19 9 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 1 1 - 9 5 7 1 3 number: (D) (D) - 10 5 8 (D) 3 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 24 6 5 7 12 15 9 21 number: 27 6 5 10 14 19 9 22 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Estimated market value of all machinery : and equipment ......................................farms, 2022: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 2017: 565 640 295 48 277 1,211 188 535 $1,000, 2022: 127,776 121,343 167,688 4,587 55,213 310,067 15,205 77,666 2017: 131,478 90,678 129,360 2,030 50,100 273,534 11,755 70,919 Average per farm ..............................dollars, 2022: 277,171 211,399 607,563 104,246 206,017 265,241 107,078 156,901 2017: 232,705 141,684 438,509 42,286 180,866 225,875 62,528 132,560 : Farms by value group: : $1 to $9,999 ...........................................2022: 68 89 23 7 51 178 24 72 2017: 94 159 24 8 43 219 54 61 $10,000 to $19,999 .....................................2022: 44 68 18 4 33 115 11 40 2017: 49 73 41 1 26 106 13 63 $20,000 to $29,999 .....................................2022: 46 59 20 3 20 107 13 43 2017: 49 93 24 14 50 139 25 81 $30,000 to $49,999 .....................................2022: 48 69 33 2 25 124 18 35 2017: 68 94 29 10 37 149 32 77 $50,000 to $69,999 .....................................2022: 34 42 20 7 26 114 18 61 2017: 52 54 17 6 24 105 25 70 : $70,000 to $99,999 .....................................2022: 37 40 25 7 15 65 13 53 2017: 39 25 12 5 10 83 3 22 $100,000 to $199,999 ...................................2022: 46 68 48 4 25 184 22 74 2017: 75 52 48 3 27 136 21 59 $200,000 to $499,999 ...................................2022: 55 87 36 9 44 139 19 88 2017: 58 41 51 1 36 124 10 65 $500,000 or more .......................................2022: 83 52 53 1 29 143 4 29 2017: 81 49 49 - 24 150 5 37 : SELECTED MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT : : Trucks, including pickups ...........................farms, 2022: 387 483 214 41 208 989 108 428 2017: 475 545 229 41 232 1,054 120 457 number, 2022: 1,360 1,270 1,483 76 634 3,370 200 1,068 2017: 1,762 1,363 1,604 63 698 3,578 221 1,195 : Tractors ............................................farms, 2022: 369 468 210 29 197 911 105 373 2017: 484 527 227 43 212 954 130 396 number, 2022: 1,082 1,057 776 41 481 2,767 171 973 2017: 1,369 1,229 897 69 543 2,834 219 1,081 : Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .....................farms, 2022: 130 210 77 12 62 427 54 140 2017: 190 296 87 21 72 461 70 162 number, 2022: 159 254 114 12 70 548 69 188 2017: 289 368 143 33 88 583 90 217 : 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms, 2022: 241 267 103 18 108 558 55 263 2017: 307 282 130 21 131 558 68 260 number, 2022: 399 380 151 24 148 898 66 428 2017: 525 475 200 28 170 892 94 472 : 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ......................farms, 2022: 169 159 129 5 109 451 25 160 2017: 204 171 143 7 116 504 27 188 number, 2022: 524 423 511 5 263 1,321 36 357 2017: 555 386 554 8 285 1,359 35 392 : Grain and bean combines, self-propelled .............farms, 2022: 46 39 59 - 44 164 5 38 2017: 65 39 73 - 61 189 6 61 number, 2022: 69 48 102 - 93 226 9 47 2017: 83 48 124 - 86 248 6 70 : Cotton pickers and strippers, self-propelled ........farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - number, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - - : Forage harvesters, self-propelled ...................farms, 2022: 58 56 34 - 25 98 18 70 2017: 56 52 32 3 45 131 6 81 number, 2022: 75 61 34 - 27 111 20 74 2017: 76 57 36 3 49 155 6 83 : Hay balers ..........................................farms, 2022: 168 137 67 10 89 309 32 144 2017: 247 174 73 17 96 370 28 186 number, 2022: 213 169 75 11 110 371 40 180 2017: 296 200 86 20 111 439 29 233 : 2022 INVENTORY : : Manufactured 2017 to 2022: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 85 133 84 9 52 222 14 109 number: 124 177 286 10 86 367 14 141 Tractors ................................................farms: 69 89 45 7 45 144 21 68 number: 115 134 197 7 61 333 21 80 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 25 36 24 4 15 51 9 22 number: 25 36 30 4 15 57 9 22 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 24 48 7 3 15 40 9 28 number: 38 56 8 3 18 51 9 28 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 28 19 19 - 17 81 3 19 number: 52 42 159 - 28 225 3 30 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 2 1 20 - 4 15 - 2 number: (D) (D) 39 - 5 20 - (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 11 2 8 - - 10 - 3 number: 15 (D) 8 - - 12 - 3 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 20 17 12 1 5 42 2 16 number: 25 17 12 (D) 7 45 (D) 16 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2022 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2017: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 16,865 742 178 702 276 163 873 number: 48,041 1,326 341 1,202 682 416 2,905 Tractors ................................................farms: 15,277 700 172 602 237 150 692 number: 37,078 1,233 395 1,030 562 300 1,839 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 6,389 414 77 290 50 59 298 number: 8,057 493 100 336 57 63 424 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 8,751 352 107 290 153 94 340 number: 13,006 484 156 342 213 120 503 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 6,243 105 60 200 126 59 344 number: 16,015 256 139 352 292 117 912 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 2,043 23 1 52 31 35 61 number: 2,819 28 (D) (D) (D) 46 89 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 2,084 81 21 77 75 25 93 number: 2,369 91 (D) 82 88 (D) 103 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 5,724 175 65 209 148 55 263 number: 6,850 196 82 237 183 65 329 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2022 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2017: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 161 84 598 613 261 129 73 number: 620 140 964 1,573 593 423 233 Tractors ................................................farms: 141 56 534 519 253 116 70 number: 457 92 900 1,313 598 366 190 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 57 33 279 227 112 21 12 number: 70 40 330 282 160 (D) 14 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 71 28 293 268 187 59 32 number: 102 38 428 404 296 (D) 38 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 65 13 115 243 61 86 47 number: 285 14 142 627 142 244 138 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 19 - 24 104 27 28 22 number: 41 - 26 134 38 33 (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 26 3 47 77 27 34 10 number: 31 5 (D) 82 28 35 12 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 65 18 217 217 92 76 38 number: 88 20 257 268 109 109 57 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2022 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2017: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 1,657 310 459 47 172 174 201 number: 4,405 920 2,474 190 353 441 784 Tractors ................................................farms: 1,491 240 434 51 181 190 190 number: 3,592 621 1,328 145 359 385 526 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 749 73 151 11 81 52 92 number: 941 80 207 14 113 68 125 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 873 152 215 19 125 113 99 number: 1,374 211 359 26 (D) 153 144 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 438 134 261 39 41 83 82 number: 1,277 330 762 105 (D) 164 257 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 135 60 78 9 10 5 24 number: 166 73 108 (D) 10 5 39 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 149 41 50 3 17 37 22 number: 170 42 63 4 17 (D) (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 454 91 155 23 74 89 69 number: 491 110 185 (D) 101 111 92 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2022 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2017: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 513 402 551 374 506 530 356 657 number: 1,201 1,536 987 1,324 1,233 1,697 1,554 1,039 Tractors ................................................farms: 474 385 464 314 475 496 335 645 number: 1,105 1,059 883 1,029 1,070 1,317 1,152 1,043 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 152 112 243 110 149 206 144 322 number: 188 158 287 156 187 252 188 388 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 289 212 280 172 328 278 204 366 number: 437 321 392 289 453 404 360 498 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 222 236 109 173 196 237 174 101 number: 480 580 204 584 430 661 604 157 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 65 93 32 29 94 63 68 27 number: (D) 153 33 (D) 117 99 95 (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 90 51 66 45 79 81 45 43 number: 95 (D) (D) 77 84 106 49 (D) Hay balers ..............................................farms: 211 146 162 111 227 239 138 200 number: 232 167 184 121 288 293 172 215 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 39. Machinery and Equipment on Operation: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2022 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2017: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 606 244 145 174 285 354 299 328 number: 1,369 642 558 594 1,237 2,083 875 871 Tractors ................................................farms: 569 205 156 151 256 319 294 287 number: 1,225 488 420 492 811 1,026 646 681 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 271 84 62 43 82 114 126 77 number: 327 99 (D) 50 90 172 164 94 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 317 135 79 86 136 178 177 162 number: 454 217 (D) 169 242 261 229 229 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 182 81 88 89 171 179 102 179 number: 444 172 (D) 273 479 593 253 358 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 105 3 77 15 87 87 54 35 number: 167 3 115 22 130 115 72 48 Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 72 32 17 47 35 41 26 72 number: (D) (D) 20 59 37 42 (D) 82 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 181 117 41 82 93 120 76 125 number: 220 151 50 109 106 144 98 138 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2022 INVENTORY - Con. : : Manufactured prior to 2017: : Trucks, including pickups ...............................farms: 362 432 203 40 195 953 100 383 number: 1,236 1,093 1,197 66 548 3,003 186 927 Tractors ................................................farms: 330 406 198 22 188 852 90 347 number: 967 923 579 34 420 2,434 150 893 Less than 40 horsepower (PTO) .........................farms: 105 181 61 8 50 384 47 118 number: 134 218 84 8 55 491 60 166 40 to 99 horsepower (PTO) .............................farms: 226 228 98 15 100 529 47 239 number: 361 324 143 21 130 847 57 400 100 horsepower (PTO) or more ..........................farms: 159 150 123 5 96 413 22 154 number: 472 381 352 5 235 1,096 33 327 : Grain and bean combines .................................farms: 45 38 43 - 41 153 5 36 number: (D) (D) 63 - 88 206 9 (D) Cotton pickers and strippers ............................farms: - - - - - - - - number: - - - - - - - - Forage harvesters, self-propelled .......................farms: 49 54 26 - 25 88 18 67 number: 60 (D) 26 - 27 99 20 71 Hay balers ..............................................farms: 154 126 55 10 84 269 32 132 number: 188 152 63 (D) 103 326 (D) 164 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 40. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2022: 8,673 367 47 225 87 88 496 2017: 10,150 482 48 217 102 105 520 acres treated, 2022: 3,496,612 23,396 5,025 60,369 23,820 55,000 285,058 2017: 3,498,515 38,052 6,805 46,679 31,884 50,826 275,849 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2022: 6,990 249 37 146 70 77 369 2017: 8,130 367 32 138 74 84 423 acres treated, 2022: 3,398,316 22,599 4,754 59,352 22,688 54,660 278,404 2017: 3,354,465 34,735 5,826 44,701 28,975 50,677 268,849 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2022: 2,555 151 18 107 20 17 184 2017: 3,251 211 24 100 30 28 183 acres treated, 2022: 98,296 797 271 1,017 1,132 340 6,654 2017: 144,050 3,317 979 1,978 2,909 149 7,000 Manure ..............................................farms, 2022: 3,432 205 29 90 59 22 155 2017: 4,007 242 17 93 54 32 162 acres treated, 2022: 331,595 5,006 1,246 4,192 4,879 454 11,924 2017: 348,931 9,019 548 2,084 5,559 371 11,092 : Organic fertilizer ..................................farms, 2022: 497 20 4 15 2 1 26 2017: 582 38 3 9 3 12 24 acres treated, 2022: 55,232 128 48 568 (D) (D) 4,163 2017: 78,542 224 (D) 307 395 6,218 9,671 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2022: 2,975 123 5 64 7 9 163 2017: 3,243 131 10 27 11 24 157 acres, 2022: 1,304,919 7,694 800 11,895 1,975 8,115 127,984 2017: 1,760,905 20,710 479 9,820 766 12,727 167,186 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2022: 8,233 404 51 241 78 73 379 2017: 9,399 543 61 215 88 98 445 acres, 2022: 3,216,414 17,506 4,231 45,554 16,373 56,937 263,640 2017: 3,775,387 34,549 8,367 75,965 35,655 59,933 260,194 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2022: 714 21 - 6 2 - 63 2017: 481 6 - 1 - - 57 acres, 2022: 311,847 1,161 - 571 (D) - 47,944 2017: 293,632 704 - (D) - - 33,731 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2022: 1,321 31 - 21 1 14 83 2017: 1,511 42 - 2 1 12 93 acres, 2022: 759,333 2,074 - 2,961 (D) 11,335 89,837 2017: 1,050,024 5,445 - (D) (D) 17,238 114,406 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ................................farms, 2022: 877 18 4 17 1 - 66 2017: 571 21 - 3 - 3 47 acres on which used, 2022: 305,558 528 4 1,239 (D) - 40,425 2017: 273,772 943 - (D) - 963 42,578 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2022: 73 22 211 365 117 79 40 2017: 67 20 310 480 129 122 42 acres treated, 2022: 31,762 977 12,538 174,504 36,557 34,023 23,224 2017: 16,729 389 14,255 148,950 28,972 48,726 16,797 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2022: 64 7 162 308 107 77 38 2017: 57 14 240 355 109 115 42 acres treated, 2022: 28,547 323 10,613 172,038 35,903 33,829 22,514 2017: 14,381 331 12,053 143,987 26,993 48,154 16,797 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2022: 16 15 78 106 18 5 5 2017: 12 8 111 199 40 19 - acres treated, 2022: 3,215 654 1,925 2,466 654 194 710 2017: 2,348 58 2,202 4,963 1,979 572 - Manure ..............................................farms, 2022: 43 9 126 140 26 37 14 2017: 30 12 181 152 48 37 9 acres treated, 2022: 3,809 159 1,683 6,172 271 10,454 3,184 2017: 2,452 523 1,423 5,921 846 4,949 956 : Organic fertilizer ..................................farms, 2022: 14 5 21 20 18 5 7 2017: 6 - 40 15 20 6 9 acres treated, 2022: 3,226 18 316 552 370 933 5,980 2017: (D) - 163 1,896 2,105 534 8,086 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2022: 16 4 33 92 46 26 2 2017: 14 5 33 113 51 39 5 acres, 2022: 9,617 162 601 44,503 13,353 15,246 (D) 2017: 18,188 (D) 572 91,993 14,374 16,703 6,182 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2022: 62 20 162 338 95 72 38 2017: 52 23 231 443 90 104 32 acres, 2022: 19,342 718 5,003 168,126 29,323 25,571 28,797 2017: 33,034 773 6,843 190,085 24,403 31,777 23,417 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2022: 3 - 7 36 3 1 - 2017: - - 6 22 - - - acres, 2022: 449 - 88 19,497 7 (D) - 2017: - - (D) 16,803 - - - : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2022: 14 - 15 36 35 1 - 2017: - 1 30 39 32 6 - acres, 2022: 8,931 - 266 18,794 13,127 (D) - 2017: - (D) (D) 23,870 15,400 6,780 - : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ................................farms, 2022: 8 - 6 35 4 2 1 2017: 2 - 6 29 8 4 - acres on which used, 2022: (D) - 57 16,360 1,350 (D) (D) 2017: (D) - 6 24,386 2,567 1,298 - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2022: 873 140 262 24 89 67 61 2017: 905 148 298 31 112 90 103 acres treated, 2022: 159,892 126,611 225,306 23,563 7,066 19,467 47,518 2017: 171,706 124,148 227,413 23,824 11,493 27,039 81,303 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2022: 581 120 234 22 65 60 52 2017: 617 129 240 23 90 78 81 acres treated, 2022: 156,676 123,305 222,468 (D) 6,278 18,382 47,316 2017: 165,602 120,071 220,474 19,961 10,234 24,807 (D) Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2022: 364 24 48 4 28 15 13 2017: 394 29 83 9 35 20 31 acres treated, 2022: 3,216 3,306 2,838 (D) 788 1,085 202 2017: 6,104 4,077 6,939 3,863 1,259 2,232 (D) Manure ..............................................farms, 2022: 403 27 106 10 12 46 30 2017: 425 34 137 8 14 64 35 acres treated, 2022: 19,672 8,379 43,097 3,369 1,198 3,976 8,533 2017: 25,505 3,250 39,225 754 141 10,007 13,823 : Organic fertilizer ..................................farms, 2022: 64 9 5 1 4 2 5 2017: 65 5 13 2 4 7 5 acres treated, 2022: 8,552 1,486 999 (D) 240 (D) 877 2017: 2,301 5 919 (D) (D) 4,745 322 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2022: 365 43 139 8 20 10 28 2017: 386 34 125 16 14 22 38 acres, 2022: 85,550 27,462 102,557 11,251 376 2,739 25,563 2017: 114,375 21,231 200,096 13,836 1,645 6,201 60,088 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2022: 890 148 252 27 83 49 70 2017: 975 175 256 28 101 68 97 acres, 2022: 159,180 116,124 208,098 20,608 8,922 6,644 37,323 2017: 174,923 133,644 275,815 28,912 12,075 9,138 109,004 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2022: 113 12 51 - 7 4 7 2017: 54 5 35 - 1 4 9 acres, 2022: 17,889 9,672 28,175 - 63 62 3,483 2017: 8,999 2,065 33,560 - (D) 158 7,902 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2022: 167 23 62 6 8 6 7 2017: 170 30 72 4 10 7 13 acres, 2022: 34,270 16,109 55,723 10,558 (D) 537 7,172 2017: 44,582 21,548 101,447 7,826 4,828 1,391 10,183 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ................................farms, 2022: 144 17 35 5 2 1 4 2017: 59 9 11 5 1 1 5 acres on which used, 2022: 27,399 5,348 25,942 5,660 (D) (D) 1,952 2017: 12,361 5,470 8,552 (D) (D) (D) 1,370 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2022: 230 244 244 251 295 335 252 241 2017: 280 244 305 245 322 396 274 310 acres treated, 2022: 40,972 150,918 13,300 98,929 124,995 139,304 116,563 20,572 2017: 57,990 133,500 16,690 94,248 115,989 155,510 105,347 23,584 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2022: 194 220 190 192 265 279 209 167 2017: 242 209 198 204 281 334 222 222 acres treated, 2022: 37,370 149,302 12,311 95,021 115,103 137,985 114,640 19,239 2017: 50,732 128,437 13,777 92,140 100,501 152,453 103,439 22,094 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2022: 60 41 87 100 87 79 67 101 2017: 65 47 155 63 75 120 71 117 acres treated, 2022: 3,602 1,616 989 3,908 9,892 1,319 1,923 1,333 2017: 7,258 5,063 2,913 2,108 15,488 3,057 1,908 1,490 Manure ..............................................farms, 2022: 123 85 105 107 49 174 123 127 2017: 159 71 150 123 67 183 142 141 acres treated, 2022: 5,976 5,289 1,876 24,367 1,306 23,456 30,341 1,049 2017: 10,914 2,810 3,819 33,450 2,366 8,419 43,699 1,776 : Organic fertilizer ..................................farms, 2022: 14 10 6 9 9 14 24 19 2017: 28 14 20 24 2 26 15 22 acres treated, 2022: 954 738 146 484 120 752 1,712 192 2017: 2,298 545 535 3,189 (D) 2,808 (D) 286 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2022: 65 97 100 67 62 74 110 49 2017: 95 85 110 52 57 84 112 40 acres, 2022: 7,184 58,417 6,759 25,846 18,892 62,200 76,033 1,728 2017: 12,045 76,477 5,223 33,559 10,591 64,704 67,187 6,357 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2022: 258 217 237 207 279 270 227 221 2017: 301 215 288 204 313 314 233 284 acres, 2022: 41,010 134,504 12,851 76,336 112,127 120,241 110,783 19,451 2017: 63,730 125,431 19,232 82,746 119,969 123,725 100,624 37,716 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2022: 12 48 4 13 2 16 11 18 2017: - 29 1 8 4 19 12 - acres, 2022: 946 19,845 (D) 5,990 (D) 18,843 8,287 306 2017: - 12,822 (D) (D) 94 33,758 7,903 - : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2022: 17 51 39 36 44 23 42 20 2017: 9 63 33 18 62 41 45 16 acres, 2022: 1,050 30,645 2,393 6,294 38,443 24,032 25,324 609 2017: 2,005 50,133 1,060 9,496 45,665 41,953 26,286 2,225 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ................................farms, 2022: 12 53 12 17 5 18 41 20 2017: 3 31 12 8 11 19 22 4 acres on which used, 2022: 1,443 25,312 873 4,775 758 8,480 15,100 360 2017: (D) 28,077 179 552 4,403 29,985 4,726 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 40. Fertilizers and Chemicals Applied: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2022: 342 88 114 72 244 238 196 128 2017: 393 136 116 126 290 347 208 129 acres treated, 2022: 148,401 16,597 110,518 30,654 118,869 217,451 139,092 67,277 2017: 140,416 28,015 89,968 44,684 132,697 204,007 152,947 38,249 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2022: 298 71 110 61 216 209 172 106 2017: 318 105 108 120 250 296 177 109 acres treated, 2022: 145,297 13,188 109,543 29,174 117,524 215,953 132,632 62,438 2017: 138,319 21,918 88,723 42,784 131,600 202,238 145,707 32,744 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2022: 70 36 11 20 43 62 45 29 2017: 117 66 16 31 83 90 46 30 acres treated, 2022: 3,104 3,409 975 1,480 1,345 1,498 6,460 4,839 2017: 2,097 6,097 1,245 1,900 1,097 1,769 7,240 5,505 Manure ..............................................farms, 2022: 75 68 6 37 52 75 43 40 2017: 87 72 18 62 75 106 34 49 acres treated, 2022: 1,008 4,556 410 6,963 2,283 7,198 534 1,974 2017: 1,100 4,298 242 9,714 2,840 8,622 356 5,602 : Organic fertilizer ..................................farms, 2022: 23 6 2 7 13 7 9 2 2017: 6 9 2 12 10 6 15 4 acres treated, 2022: 342 18 (D) 644 6,078 151 69 (D) 2017: 42 247 (D) 1,083 (D) (D) 299 162 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2022: 114 7 54 22 114 134 64 27 2017: 88 3 56 51 112 214 87 26 acres, 2022: 38,412 13 20,247 6,774 37,742 133,851 32,442 9,359 2017: 28,534 (D) 23,817 19,914 71,311 177,860 41,198 4,370 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2022: 386 68 136 57 205 208 218 107 2017: 395 94 110 82 206 296 212 128 acres, 2022: 159,148 2,655 118,445 24,467 111,699 202,924 150,249 71,462 2017: 198,979 5,916 120,098 48,035 117,554 202,607 211,913 40,253 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2022: 20 1 4 4 63 38 5 4 2017: 10 - 3 - 65 34 9 - acres, 2022: 6,687 (D) 1,280 (D) 22,105 28,224 1,213 8,916 2017: 1,684 - 107 - 18,658 28,410 7,166 - : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2022: 84 3 32 2 90 48 38 7 2017: 89 7 40 3 79 90 91 9 acres, 2022: 59,970 8 25,437 (D) 30,975 67,198 46,799 14,138 2017: 76,230 8 33,383 3,557 49,686 73,611 94,278 1,405 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ................................farms, 2022: 25 2 7 5 69 47 2 4 2017: 42 - 10 2 36 37 22 2 acres on which used, 2022: 5,404 (D) 3,983 882 25,105 23,717 (D) (D) 2017: 22,554 - 5,550 (D) 23,578 15,297 9,163 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commercial fertilizer, lime, and soil : conditioners .......................................farms, 2022: 193 241 118 10 95 570 28 171 2017: 236 277 138 12 105 688 25 217 acres treated, 2022: 75,308 46,549 174,038 165 53,817 189,533 2,822 24,292 2017: 73,129 43,249 182,157 293 44,504 200,561 1,986 26,956 Cropland fertilized, except cropland pasture ......farms, 2022: 146 188 108 7 93 491 19 134 2017: 201 199 130 10 99 610 16 162 acres treated, 2022: 70,365 44,275 173,633 (D) 53,712 183,365 2,310 22,214 2017: 70,767 40,372 181,438 (D) 43,708 193,104 1,194 22,599 Pastureland and rangeland fertilized ..............farms, 2022: 60 94 24 4 3 132 10 54 2017: 60 111 21 5 27 193 10 66 acres treated, 2022: 4,943 2,274 405 (D) 105 6,168 512 2,078 2017: 2,362 2,877 719 (D) 796 7,457 792 4,357 Manure ..............................................farms, 2022: 84 115 19 3 22 243 20 48 2017: 109 126 33 6 27 305 17 59 acres treated, 2022: 15,387 5,462 5,393 3 1,228 39,126 543 4,210 2017: 12,964 6,633 2,420 58 2,177 41,836 940 3,428 : Organic fertilizer ..................................farms, 2022: 16 4 2 3 12 24 6 8 2017: 11 9 3 2 8 32 2 14 acres treated, 2022: 276 (D) (D) 3 (D) 5,887 61 1,363 2017: 858 285 922 (D) 188 13,332 (D) 1,194 : Acres treated to control- : Insects ...........................................farms, 2022: 67 112 40 4 48 242 9 90 2017: 116 107 59 2 37 284 7 104 acres, 2022: 43,717 29,713 79,837 (D) 26,039 78,717 456 12,088 2017: 59,316 19,128 130,565 (D) 21,733 95,653 85 13,847 Weeds, grass, or brush ............................farms, 2022: 184 243 101 6 97 532 39 198 2017: 240 265 127 10 95 606 33 223 acres, 2022: 73,000 43,446 175,087 71 45,641 147,561 1,572 23,664 2017: 92,139 40,809 216,174 196 50,283 193,420 2,683 32,649 Nematodes .........................................farms, 2022: 8 20 24 - 21 32 4 6 2017: 18 19 23 - 5 15 - 7 acres, 2022: 7,134 2,440 34,579 - 5,681 7,861 26 232 2017: 13,142 4,347 38,489 - 2,601 8,051 - 969 : Diseases in crops and orchards ....................farms, 2022: 36 41 32 - 23 66 4 13 2017: 38 42 46 - 16 86 - 24 acres, 2022: 20,895 3,768 45,902 - 7,941 32,020 21 740 2017: 10,946 8,803 94,006 - 19,010 26,207 - 2,182 : Chemicals used to control growth, thin fruit, : ripen, or defoliate ................................farms, 2022: 10 43 27 - 9 69 3 7 2017: 6 19 6 - 7 48 - 10 acres on which used, 2022: 1,763 5,303 34,110 - 2,834 14,449 3 259 2017: 850 1,643 10,799 - 2,105 5,325 - 322 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 41. Land Use Practices: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile ................................farms, 2022: 405 10 6 10 2 8 8 2017: 522 18 1 6 1 11 18 acres, 2022: 74,786 1,055 310 233 (D) 1,295 (D) 2017: 76,176 149 (D) 72 (D) 1,512 (D) Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 185 106 52 23 (D) 162 (D) 2017: 146 8 (D) 12 (D) 137 (D) : Land artificially drained by ditches ................farms, 2022: 2,229 186 25 37 21 30 26 2017: 1,998 268 - 12 22 36 54 acres, 2022: 217,276 4,709 3,268 271 2,048 5,143 433 2017: 197,068 7,428 - 310 1,976 8,527 1,682 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 97 25 131 7 98 171 17 2017: 99 28 - 26 90 237 31 : Land under conservation easement ....................farms, 2022: 427 5 8 24 5 3 7 2017: 324 7 2 8 2 1 11 acres, 2022: 166,621 17 2,260 2,265 (D) 45 523 2017: 165,194 23 (D) 1,350 (D) (D) 7,676 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 390 3 283 94 (D) 15 75 2017: 510 3 (D) 169 (D) (D) 698 : Cropland on which no-till practices : were used ..........................................farms, 2022: 1,798 77 14 75 15 27 61 2017: 1,216 67 6 31 30 18 40 acres, 2022: 641,103 1,781 483 9,728 2,726 5,164 48,762 2017: 513,984 2,730 189 13,362 1,267 5,841 17,448 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 357 23 35 130 182 191 799 2017: 423 41 32 431 42 325 436 : Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ....................................farms, 2022: 2,102 72 14 52 15 31 81 2017: 1,848 35 2 42 38 31 54 acres, 2022: 983,544 8,552 411 6,591 3,099 40,894 49,612 2017: 979,587 6,128 (D) 11,981 7,063 39,708 62,215 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 468 119 29 127 207 1,319 612 2017: 530 175 (D) 285 186 1,281 1,152 : Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) .....................farms, 2022: 4,226 86 16 93 94 32 201 2017: 4,513 129 17 110 100 35 225 acres, 2022: 1,842,044 12,676 870 41,467 15,012 10,939 160,093 2017: 1,992,641 27,873 1,560 33,140 20,658 13,441 190,899 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 436 147 54 446 160 342 796 2017: 442 216 92 301 207 384 848 : Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ....................................farms, 2022: 1,326 43 8 38 18 13 61 2017: 1,362 56 9 32 13 11 52 acres, 2022: 127,777 1,355 190 2,161 497 553 8,829 2017: 128,963 2,965 22 1,690 711 390 8,060 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 96 32 24 57 28 43 145 2017: 95 53 2 53 55 35 155 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ...farms, 2022: 2,717 56 8 49 44 40 163 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Land Use Practices: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile ................................farms, 2022: 2 - 4 3 2 1 - 2017: - - 4 5 10 - - acres, 2022: (D) - (D) 94 (D) (D) - 2017: - - (D) 58 552 - - Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: (D) - (D) 31 (D) (D) - 2017: - - (D) 12 55 - - : Land artificially drained by ditches ................farms, 2022: 2 1 35 39 43 - - 2017: 7 - 107 84 36 - 1 acres, 2022: (D) (D) 3,344 2,438 25,560 - - 2017: (D) - 7,003 3,022 14,760 - (D) Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: (D) (D) 96 63 594 - - 2017: (D) - 65 36 410 - (D) : Land under conservation easement ....................farms, 2022: 25 - 9 14 18 5 1 2017: 17 5 20 18 10 7 - acres, 2022: 74,021 - 2,218 4,647 5,251 (D) (D) 2017: 27,908 216 1,000 7,979 3,016 4,230 - Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 2,961 - 246 332 292 (D) (D) 2017: 1,642 43 50 443 302 604 - : Cropland on which no-till practices : were used ..........................................farms, 2022: 21 5 51 62 55 27 16 2017: 4 - 60 59 30 19 8 acres, 2022: 2,619 22 2,405 54,802 13,177 1,366 8,067 2017: 23 - 875 41,322 10,075 2,616 (D) Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 125 4 47 884 240 51 504 2017: 6 - 15 700 336 138 (D) : Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ....................................farms, 2022: 21 2 56 48 27 28 19 2017: 9 1 32 63 24 16 9 acres, 2022: 3,663 (D) 640 27,074 14,087 6,572 8,430 2017: 517 (D) 577 28,582 8,143 6,738 3,978 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 174 (D) 11 564 522 235 444 2017: 57 (D) 18 454 339 421 442 : Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) .....................farms, 2022: 36 4 80 165 32 42 37 2017: 42 2 58 173 63 69 57 acres, 2022: 15,668 122 2,470 79,455 3,784 12,650 16,323 2017: 15,671 (D) 1,567 85,262 6,248 16,994 20,351 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 435 31 31 482 118 301 441 2017: 373 (D) 27 493 99 246 357 : Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ....................................farms, 2022: 22 - 60 34 50 6 7 2017: 10 1 70 56 42 25 9 acres, 2022: 2,680 - 835 2,651 2,540 1,028 368 2017: 1,029 (D) 317 5,462 2,075 2,273 444 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 122 - 14 78 51 171 53 2017: 103 (D) 5 98 49 91 49 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ...farms, 2022: 12 - 20 87 39 29 27 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Land Use Practices: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile ................................farms, 2022: 55 3 2 - 6 - 2 2017: 49 3 8 - 6 - 6 acres, 2022: 3,867 108 (D) - 669 - (D) 2017: 3,106 240 70 - 289 - 5,580 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 70 36 (D) - 112 - (D) 2017: 63 80 9 - 48 - 930 : Land artificially drained by ditches ................farms, 2022: 605 6 27 - 8 13 11 2017: 641 7 24 - 27 9 11 acres, 2022: 50,648 1,301 2,095 - 834 655 (D) 2017: 63,969 1,260 1,573 - 941 1,122 (D) Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 84 217 78 - 104 50 (D) 2017: 100 180 66 - 35 125 (D) : Land under conservation easement ....................farms, 2022: 15 18 1 4 6 11 2 2017: 12 8 5 2 2 7 - acres, 2022: 564 9,300 (D) 986 252 4,704 (D) 2017: 892 8,380 (D) (D) (D) 15,491 - Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 38 517 (D) 247 42 428 (D) 2017: 74 1,048 (D) (D) (D) 2,213 - : Cropland on which no-till practices : were used ..........................................farms, 2022: 114 41 56 7 24 20 14 2017: 74 21 28 2 14 16 17 acres, 2022: 7,607 10,396 16,230 4,123 5,470 882 9,875 2017: 5,285 6,110 18,127 (D) 1,715 442 4,820 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 67 254 290 589 228 44 705 2017: 71 291 647 (D) 123 28 284 : Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ....................................farms, 2022: 212 61 92 7 11 19 24 2017: 178 38 80 5 13 4 33 acres, 2022: 42,336 71,435 69,084 6,087 5,264 1,202 22,487 2017: 45,166 65,123 63,677 5,129 10,799 1,646 30,592 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 200 1,171 751 870 479 63 937 2017: 254 1,714 796 1,026 831 412 927 : Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) .....................farms, 2022: 430 64 191 14 13 44 46 2017: 321 101 166 19 34 58 42 acres, 2022: 119,314 55,125 168,919 6,589 248 4,003 18,957 2017: 105,439 66,233 157,226 7,930 1,220 5,235 51,001 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 277 861 884 471 19 91 412 2017: 328 656 947 417 36 90 1,214 : Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ....................................farms, 2022: 133 24 37 1 7 12 17 2017: 110 21 55 3 10 19 28 acres, 2022: 10,954 4,553 10,194 (D) 168 1,205 2,451 2017: 7,011 2,988 11,742 1,072 453 2,123 12,062 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 82 190 276 (D) 24 100 144 2017: 64 142 213 357 45 112 431 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ...farms, 2022: 268 59 123 9 13 12 28 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Land Use Practices: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile ................................farms, 2022: 34 2 8 1 16 - 6 14 2017: 54 3 16 9 24 3 5 6 acres, 2022: 2,724 (D) 112 (D) 1,285 - 4,572 471 2017: 6,795 (D) 556 922 2,064 207 34 (D) Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 80 (D) 14 (D) 80 - 762 34 2017: 126 (D) 35 102 86 69 7 (D) : Land artificially drained by ditches ................farms, 2022: 24 21 146 38 42 26 46 30 2017: 42 44 - 59 43 34 - 46 acres, 2022: 2,501 1,311 5,720 1,899 7,895 1,367 1,299 721 2017: 3,428 1,638 - 1,919 8,236 3,218 - 2,880 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 104 62 39 50 188 53 28 24 2017: 82 37 - 33 192 95 - 63 : Land under conservation easement ....................farms, 2022: 6 18 2 1 9 12 - 22 2017: 14 23 2 9 5 5 - 20 acres, 2022: 741 2,662 (D) (D) (D) 473 - 3,560 2017: 2,367 11,163 (D) 86 10,875 (D) - 3,115 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 124 148 (D) (D) (D) 39 - 162 2017: 169 485 (D) 10 2,175 (D) - 156 : Cropland on which no-till practices : were used ..........................................farms, 2022: 38 17 65 49 77 34 22 75 2017: 42 11 22 9 56 26 16 33 acres, 2022: 5,956 8,859 787 4,208 37,032 9,735 3,201 8,515 2017: 8,108 4,212 2,271 1,263 32,252 12,829 589 11,375 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 157 521 12 86 481 286 146 114 2017: 193 383 103 140 576 493 37 345 : Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ....................................farms, 2022: 68 29 55 62 94 58 48 28 2017: 59 40 26 30 71 58 67 21 acres, 2022: 10,575 14,125 3,863 19,471 47,468 14,010 28,343 8,580 2017: 9,597 28,506 1,863 9,819 36,605 26,822 18,590 6,909 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 156 487 70 314 505 242 590 306 2017: 163 713 72 327 516 462 277 329 : Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) .....................farms, 2022: 155 152 90 149 82 165 155 77 2017: 221 149 85 147 114 187 147 77 acres, 2022: 25,800 119,139 6,622 63,973 33,395 79,707 71,542 2,438 2017: 34,071 93,939 8,215 73,402 43,504 88,719 75,652 9,510 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 166 784 74 429 407 483 462 32 2017: 154 630 97 499 382 474 515 124 : Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ....................................farms, 2022: 43 26 48 64 27 22 39 48 2017: 53 31 30 47 20 33 41 41 acres, 2022: 1,766 7,974 494 12,407 2,234 1,383 5,898 1,385 2017: 3,092 4,690 337 9,653 1,420 2,383 4,940 543 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 41 307 10 194 83 63 151 29 2017: 58 151 11 205 71 72 120 13 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ...farms, 2022: 51 83 34 99 95 63 105 34 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Land Use Practices: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile ................................farms, 2022: 70 3 21 1 - 5 29 7 2017: 93 1 16 - 2 12 54 6 acres, 2022: 30,970 7 4,474 (D) - 344 12,626 131 2017: 22,560 (D) 1,570 - (D) 80 21,876 194 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 442 2 213 (D) - 69 435 19 2017: 243 (D) 98 - (D) 7 405 32 : Land artificially drained by ditches ................farms, 2022: 83 17 15 13 12 31 21 16 2017: 104 4 21 - 24 69 31 7 acres, 2022: 14,083 1,249 12,883 598 228 969 8,408 531 2017: 18,482 20 7,052 - 550 2,581 9,856 1,780 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 170 73 859 46 19 31 400 33 2017: 178 5 336 - 23 37 318 254 : Land under conservation easement ....................farms, 2022: 61 14 6 2 14 2 10 15 2017: 19 16 2 1 5 2 6 5 acres, 2022: 2,614 15,465 (D) (D) 1,514 (D) 2,262 1,260 2017: 941 22,519 (D) (D) 1,077 (D) 3,708 (D) Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 43 1,105 (D) (D) 108 (D) 226 84 2017: 50 1,407 (D) (D) 215 (D) 618 (D) : Cropland on which no-till practices : were used ..........................................farms, 2022: 117 24 62 15 22 20 80 59 2017: 84 8 54 8 24 18 57 31 acres, 2022: 40,642 737 76,534 1,187 12,373 3,637 106,700 49,181 2017: 44,147 80 67,216 1,265 10,651 2,229 111,940 18,171 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 347 31 1,234 79 562 182 1,334 834 2017: 526 10 1,245 158 444 124 1,964 586 : Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ....................................farms, 2022: 145 15 46 16 34 43 59 30 2017: 114 1 29 27 31 55 72 49 acres, 2022: 102,202 1,429 54,420 3,118 33,779 70,520 50,823 9,689 2017: 120,604 (D) 47,359 5,555 23,577 17,959 82,412 23,396 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 705 95 1,183 195 994 1,640 861 323 2017: 1,058 (D) 1,633 206 761 327 1,145 477 : Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) .....................farms, 2022: 96 29 33 51 139 151 52 103 2017: 89 43 33 70 161 214 33 68 acres, 2022: 24,571 2,151 14,662 23,654 70,473 145,635 11,737 31,601 2017: 19,387 3,412 15,484 32,485 92,237 164,297 8,789 15,369 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 256 74 444 464 507 964 226 307 2017: 218 79 469 464 573 768 266 226 : Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ....................................farms, 2022: 72 19 10 9 12 12 22 21 2017: 54 22 7 22 31 33 32 16 acres, 2022: 2,053 1,391 418 2,183 192 3,559 2,703 650 2017: 3,856 1,523 1,055 3,364 1,302 3,169 1,728 370 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 29 73 42 243 16 297 123 31 2017: 71 69 151 153 42 96 54 23 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ...farms, 2022: 128 13 66 29 95 119 65 49 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 41. Land Use Practices: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Land drained by tile ................................farms, 2022: 14 23 - - - 21 3 3 2017: 13 9 5 - 2 29 - 14 acres, 2022: 5,873 485 - - - 243 180 162 2017: 959 152 1,262 - (D) 1,661 - 603 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 420 21 - - - 12 60 54 2017: 74 17 252 - (D) 57 - 43 : Land artificially drained by ditches ................farms, 2022: 74 137 5 4 6 251 14 42 2017: 97 - 12 7 8 - - - acres, 2022: 8,004 11,144 (D) 18 1,550 14,315 8,069 3,086 2017: 11,762 - 1,455 449 260 - - - Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 108 81 (D) 5 258 57 576 73 2017: 121 - 121 64 33 - - - : Land under conservation easement ....................farms, 2022: 5 2 6 - 27 4 6 2 2017: 6 3 5 1 16 10 2 3 acres, 2022: 1,042 (D) 1,931 - 4,772 110 2,160 (D) 2017: 34 (D) 4,475 (D) 4,331 455 (D) 367 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 208 (D) 322 - 177 28 360 (D) 2017: 6 (D) 895 (D) 271 46 (D) 122 : Cropland on which no-till practices : were used ..........................................farms, 2022: 38 46 19 - 39 64 12 22 2017: 34 28 18 1 16 63 3 10 acres, 2022: 8,804 3,362 45,715 - 3,509 3,128 376 1,240 2017: 4,909 2,076 39,053 (D) 2,093 3,886 35 280 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 232 73 2,406 - 90 49 31 56 2017: 144 74 2,170 (D) 131 62 12 28 : Cropland on which conservation or reduced tillage, : excluding no-till, practices were : used (see text) ....................................farms, 2022: 48 64 34 - 16 187 5 26 2017: 82 28 34 - 17 197 1 32 acres, 2022: 18,832 7,406 36,157 - 3,575 56,268 (D) 1,318 2017: 20,671 6,981 37,663 - 9,074 44,815 (D) 2,789 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 392 116 1,063 - 223 301 (D) 51 2017: 252 249 1,108 - 534 227 (D) 87 : Cropland on which intensive or conventional tillage : practices were used (see text) .....................farms, 2022: 109 115 67 - 56 339 11 130 2017: 114 113 83 2 67 357 10 108 acres, 2022: 39,636 26,205 132,276 - 43,194 105,454 1,434 22,061 2017: 27,707 26,312 169,799 (D) 33,686 110,989 872 16,713 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 364 228 1,974 - 771 311 130 170 2017: 243 233 2,046 (D) 503 311 87 155 : Cropland planted to a cover crop : (excluding CRP) ....................................farms, 2022: 41 53 19 2 21 81 5 19 2017: 37 22 10 - 23 93 3 29 acres, 2022: 6,944 3,943 3,412 (D) 970 10,524 (D) 1,818 2017: 3,261 2,538 1,814 - 3,417 10,336 (D) 1,159 Average per farm ................................acres, 2022: 169 74 180 (D) 46 130 (D) 96 2017: 88 115 181 - 149 111 (D) 40 Use of precision agriculture practices (see text) ...farms, 2022: 79 80 60 - 28 195 6 55 2017: (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) (NA) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 42. Organic Agriculture: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales .........................farms, 2022: 227 7 - 2 8 3 1 2017: 260 8 - 1 13 1 6 $1,000, 2022: 166,224 (D) - (D) 2,547 117 (D) 2017: 128,916 323 - (D) 3,988 (D) 1,643 : By value of sales: : $1 to $4,999 ....................................farms, 2022: 24 5 - 2 - - - 2017: 37 2 - - - 1 - $1,000, 2022: 59 3 - (D) - - - 2017: 63 (D) - - - (D) - : $5,000 or more ..................................farms, 2022: 203 2 - - 8 3 1 2017: 223 6 - 1 13 - 6 $1,000, 2022: 166,165 (D) - - 2,547 117 (D) 2017: 128,853 (D) - (D) 3,988 - 1,643 : TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program : certified organic production .......................farms, 2022: 233 3 - - 8 3 4 2017: 261 6 - 1 15 2 6 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification ...............farms, 2022: 20 4 - 2 1 - - 2017: 34 3 - - - - - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic : Program organic production .........................farms, 2022: 35 - - - - - 2 2017: 87 - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 42. Organic Agriculture: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales .........................farms, 2022: 6 - 8 4 5 1 35 2017: 13 - 5 2 4 6 38 $1,000, 2022: 2,691 - 818 1,535 (D) (D) 12,691 2017: 2,734 - (D) (D) 3 552 9,654 : By value of sales: : $1 to $4,999 ....................................farms, 2022: - - - - 1 - 2 2017: - - 3 - 4 - 6 $1,000, 2022: - - - - (D) - (D) 2017: - - 9 - 3 - 3 : $5,000 or more ..................................farms, 2022: 6 - 8 4 4 1 33 2017: 13 - 2 2 - 6 32 $1,000, 2022: 2,691 - 818 1,535 (D) (D) (D) 2017: 2,734 - (D) (D) - 552 9,651 : TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program : certified organic production .......................farms, 2022: 7 - 10 6 10 1 34 2017: 15 - 3 2 - 6 37 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification ...............farms, 2022: - - 1 - 1 - 1 2017: - - 7 - 4 - 2 Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic : Program organic production .........................farms, 2022: 2 - 2 - 6 - 1 2017: 6 - 7 6 - - 5 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales .........................farms, 2022: 11 3 7 3 - - 8 2017: 11 1 4 2 - 3 6 $1,000, 2022: 3,250 (D) 2,407 4,470 - - 5,864 2017: 1,521 (D) 2,589 (D) - 1,615 1,963 : By value of sales: : $1 to $4,999 ....................................farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - 2017: 3 - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - 2017: 9 - - - - - - : $5,000 or more ..................................farms, 2022: 10 3 7 3 - - 8 2017: 8 1 4 2 - 3 6 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) 2,407 4,470 - - 5,864 2017: 1,512 (D) 2,589 (D) - 1,615 1,963 : TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program : certified organic production .......................farms, 2022: 10 3 7 3 - - 9 2017: 11 - 4 2 - 3 7 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification ...............farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - 2017: - 1 - - - - - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic : Program organic production .........................farms, 2022: 3 - - 3 - - 1 2017: 5 - 2 - - 2 2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales .........................farms, 2022: 10 - 2 12 - - 11 4 2017: 24 - 6 8 - 5 10 1 $1,000, 2022: 5,323 - (D) 9,706 - - (D) (D) 2017: 9,010 - 38 856 - 804 41,605 (D) : By value of sales: : $1 to $4,999 ....................................farms, 2022: - - - - - - 6 2 2017: 4 - 4 4 - - - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - - - 24 (D) 2017: 14 - (D) (Z) - - - - : $5,000 or more ..................................farms, 2022: 10 - 2 12 - - 5 2 2017: 20 - 2 4 - 5 10 1 $1,000, 2022: 5,323 - (D) 9,706 - - (D) (D) 2017: 8,996 - (D) 856 - 804 41,605 (D) : TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program : certified organic production .......................farms, 2022: 12 - 2 12 1 - 5 2 2017: 26 - 7 9 - 5 10 3 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification ...............farms, 2022: - - - - - - 6 2 2017: - - 1 - - 1 6 - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic : Program organic production .........................farms, 2022: - - 3 - - - 3 - 2017: 15 6 2 4 - 3 - 2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 42. Organic Agriculture: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales .........................farms, 2022: 6 2 - 12 - 3 1 4 2017: 3 3 - 8 1 5 1 2 $1,000, 2022: 629 (D) - 4,176 - 2,247 (D) 631 2017: 29 108 - 4,285 (D) 2,812 (D) (D) : By value of sales: : $1 to $4,999 ....................................farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - - 2017: 1 - - - - - - - $1,000, 2022: (D) - - - - - - - 2017: (D) - - - - - - - : $5,000 or more ..................................farms, 2022: 5 2 - 12 - 3 1 4 2017: 2 3 - 8 1 5 1 2 $1,000, 2022: (D) (D) - 4,176 - 2,247 (D) 631 2017: (D) 108 - 4,285 (D) 2,812 (D) (D) : TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program : certified organic production .......................farms, 2022: 5 2 - 12 6 3 1 4 2017: 2 3 - 8 1 6 1 2 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification ...............farms, 2022: 1 - - - - - - - 2017: 5 - - - - - - - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic : Program organic production .........................farms, 2022: 8 - - - - - - - 2017: 4 - - 1 - 5 - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VALUE OF SALES OF CERTIFIED OR EXEMPT : ORGANICALLY PRODUCED COMMODITIES : : Total organic product sales .........................farms, 2022: 1 3 8 - 14 14 1 7 2017: 7 2 3 - 16 26 1 4 $1,000, 2022: (D) 395 (D) - 2,319 30,310 (D) 1,536 2017: 340 (D) 919 - 3,834 35,072 (D) 614 : By value of sales: : $1 to $4,999 ....................................farms, 2022: - - - - 2 2 - - 2017: - - - - - 5 - - $1,000, 2022: - - - - (D) (D) - - 2017: - - - - - 7 - - : $5,000 or more ..................................farms, 2022: 1 3 8 - 12 12 1 7 2017: 7 2 3 - 16 21 1 4 $1,000, 2022: (D) 395 (D) - (D) (D) (D) 1,536 2017: 340 (D) 919 - 3,834 35,066 (D) 614 : TYPE OF PRODUCTION : : USDA National Organic Program : certified organic production .......................farms, 2022: 1 3 8 - 14 14 1 7 2017: 7 2 3 - 16 23 1 6 USDA National Organic Program organic : production exempt from certification ...............farms, 2022: - - - - - - - - 2017: - 1 - - - 3 - - Acres transitioning into USDA National Organic : Program organic production .........................farms, 2022: - - - - 1 - - - 2017: 2 2 - - 2 2 - 2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 43. Selected Practices: 2022 and 2017 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Received irrigation water from the : U.S. Bureau of Reclamation .........................farms, 2022: 4,450 408 23 131 8 - 284 2017: 5,367 586 17 110 10 - 299 Practiced alley cropping, silvopasture, : forest farming, or had riparian forest : buffers or windbreaks ..............................farms, 2022: 304 3 4 11 1 5 10 2017: 317 8 3 4 - 10 15 Harvested biomass for use in : renewable energy ...................................farms, 2022: 136 6 1 6 1 4 4 2017: 121 12 - 2 - - 1 : Practiced rotational or management-intensive : grazing ............................................farms, 2022: 3,615 179 46 165 63 25 191 2017: 3,926 246 49 142 60 24 201 Raised or sold veal calves ..........................farms, 2022: 11 - - - - - - 2017: 41 - - 2 - - - On-farm packing facility ............................farms, 2022: 148 7 6 2 - - 5 2017: 136 9 3 - - - 6 Had a barn that was built prior to 1960 .............farms, 2022: 3,544 100 43 113 96 50 115 2017: 4,338 167 60 119 87 56 180 Aware of right to appeal an adverse program decision : to USDA's National Appeals Division ................farms, 2022: 6,584 292 53 266 128 47 278 2017: 7,806 340 81 259 155 98 374 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 43. Selected Practices: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Received irrigation water from the : U.S. Bureau of Reclamation .........................farms, 2022: 44 4 2 296 - 10 6 2017: 28 3 3 400 - 26 1 Practiced alley cropping, silvopasture, : forest farming, or had riparian forest : buffers or windbreaks ..............................farms, 2022: 2 2 54 5 21 2 1 2017: - 2 67 2 10 3 - Harvested biomass for use in : renewable energy ...................................farms, 2022: - 2 10 2 5 2 - 2017: - - 13 2 1 - - : Practiced rotational or management-intensive : grazing ............................................farms, 2022: 29 18 132 132 54 11 10 2017: 19 16 178 146 45 24 17 Raised or sold veal calves ..........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - - 2017: - - - - - - - On-farm packing facility ............................farms, 2022: 3 - 14 2 11 - - 2017: 3 - 20 - 5 - 4 Had a barn that was built prior to 1960 .............farms, 2022: 39 20 138 96 68 26 12 2017: 24 13 227 153 68 30 15 Aware of right to appeal an adverse program decision : to USDA's National Appeals Division ................farms, 2022: 68 34 204 269 93 57 43 2017: 63 34 271 366 92 81 63 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Received irrigation water from the : U.S. Bureau of Reclamation .........................farms, 2022: 1,004 11 142 6 - 10 41 2017: 1,077 17 176 1 - 12 35 Practiced alley cropping, silvopasture, : forest farming, or had riparian forest : buffers or windbreaks ..............................farms, 2022: 11 - 2 - 10 1 - 2017: 16 2 5 - 15 - 4 Harvested biomass for use in : renewable energy ...................................farms, 2022: 15 1 2 - 6 - 1 2017: 10 - 4 - 1 2 - : Practiced rotational or management-intensive : grazing ............................................farms, 2022: 453 51 88 20 32 41 45 2017: 424 63 95 8 35 56 33 Raised or sold veal calves ..........................farms, 2022: - - - - - - 3 2017: 8 2 3 - - - - On-farm packing facility ............................farms, 2022: 34 - 4 - 1 - - 2017: 22 1 1 - - 1 - Had a barn that was built prior to 1960 .............farms, 2022: 295 83 53 5 55 43 39 2017: 320 96 94 7 55 62 47 Aware of right to appeal an adverse program decision : to USDA's National Appeals Division ................farms, 2022: 593 131 166 16 92 60 73 2017: 633 156 190 16 92 96 101 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Received irrigation water from the : U.S. Bureau of Reclamation .........................farms, 2022: 44 101 252 97 3 194 141 22 2017: 50 127 327 140 11 222 158 34 Practiced alley cropping, silvopasture, : forest farming, or had riparian forest : buffers or windbreaks ..............................farms, 2022: 3 - 5 3 21 1 1 45 2017: 2 4 2 4 20 4 - 28 Harvested biomass for use in : renewable energy ...................................farms, 2022: - 12 4 - 11 1 2 12 2017: - - 2 5 8 2 - 5 : Practiced rotational or management-intensive : grazing ............................................farms, 2022: 99 68 147 87 94 86 63 126 2017: 95 65 162 68 114 104 57 139 Raised or sold veal calves ..........................farms, 2022: 3 - - - - - - - 2017: 7 2 5 - 3 - - - On-farm packing facility ............................farms, 2022: 2 1 2 - 1 2 2 4 2017: 2 2 5 2 - - 2 3 Had a barn that was built prior to 1960 .............farms, 2022: 177 80 102 62 202 83 57 130 2017: 196 73 133 80 227 122 73 173 Aware of right to appeal an adverse program decision : to USDA's National Appeals Division ................farms, 2022: 192 150 199 114 239 189 134 268 2017: 243 159 274 156 268 208 163 281 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 43. Selected Practices: 2022 and 2017 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Received irrigation water from the : U.S. Bureau of Reclamation .........................farms, 2022: 2 6 1 44 97 222 16 28 2017: 2 16 - 57 139 320 23 21 Practiced alley cropping, silvopasture, : forest farming, or had riparian forest : buffers or windbreaks ..............................farms, 2022: 28 6 5 - 1 - 14 4 2017: 30 - 3 - 13 2 20 - Harvested biomass for use in : renewable energy ...................................farms, 2022: 10 - - - 2 - 4 - 2017: 6 5 - 1 8 4 1 2 : Practiced rotational or management-intensive : grazing ............................................farms, 2022: 102 91 11 30 30 59 66 43 2017: 139 92 26 65 61 78 52 62 Raised or sold veal calves ..........................farms, 2022: - - - 1 - - - - 2017: 1 - - 1 - 1 6 - On-farm packing facility ............................farms, 2022: 12 1 - - - 2 9 - 2017: 5 4 - - 1 7 1 2 Had a barn that was built prior to 1960 .............farms, 2022: 199 64 64 19 23 41 136 61 2017: 229 74 58 45 62 76 134 59 Aware of right to appeal an adverse program decision : to USDA's National Appeals Division ................farms, 2022: 288 83 84 70 93 142 175 128 2017: 337 113 80 96 132 185 165 136 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Received irrigation water from the : U.S. Bureau of Reclamation .........................farms, 2022: 129 221 37 - 9 273 13 68 2017: 151 239 45 - 20 382 22 60 Practiced alley cropping, silvopasture, : forest farming, or had riparian forest : buffers or windbreaks ..............................farms, 2022: 1 2 - - 3 2 12 2 2017: 4 3 - 1 1 8 2 - Harvested biomass for use in : renewable energy ...................................farms, 2022: 2 2 - - 2 1 2 1 2017: - 3 - 5 5 11 - - : Practiced rotational or management-intensive : grazing ............................................farms, 2022: 94 117 28 7 35 205 45 97 2017: 106 147 14 12 55 200 38 94 Raised or sold veal calves ..........................farms, 2022: - - - - - 4 - - 2017: - - - - - - - - On-farm packing facility ............................farms, 2022: - 4 1 - 5 6 3 2 2017: 4 4 - - 6 9 1 1 Had a barn that was built prior to 1960 .............farms, 2022: 84 79 47 6 39 167 35 98 2017: 84 98 43 13 43 194 34 135 Aware of right to appeal an adverse program decision : to USDA's National Appeals Division ................farms, 2022: 162 162 99 12 95 334 30 179 2017: 184 179 114 15 111 382 57 207 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 44. Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ....................................................: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 1,681 24 - 19 4 30 73 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 767 44 2 34 7 1 52 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 401 31 8 23 - 4 6 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 555 36 4 29 3 15 12 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 7,395 306 59 316 154 112 276 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..........................: 7,395 306 59 316 154 112 276 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 6,883 374 98 326 123 43 416 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 132 2 2 4 3 1 8 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 334 12 - 10 9 - 17 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 179 6 - 3 - - 8 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 601 37 3 27 2 7 30 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 1,092 79 10 50 6 4 34 Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................................: 2,857 191 43 164 42 23 149 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 44. Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ....................................................: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 1 - 4 85 30 8 7 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 8 - 14 46 5 1 3 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 1 5 29 13 16 - - Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 6 7 38 32 29 6 3 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 88 14 245 278 116 78 66 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..........................: 88 14 245 278 116 78 66 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 35 56 174 200 68 39 17 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: - - 1 4 - 1 1 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: - - 4 4 2 - - Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 2 - 26 5 5 - - Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 2 - 66 25 14 - 7 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 7 1 67 59 19 7 1 Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................................: 53 25 130 142 15 7 6 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ....................................................: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 120 46 58 3 8 - 16 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 105 17 21 - 5 1 4 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 66 - - - 3 - 3 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 48 13 7 - 10 - - Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 493 108 191 24 128 92 69 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..........................: 493 108 191 24 128 92 69 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 861 129 180 31 64 85 97 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 3 1 9 - - 1 1 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 29 2 24 - - - 7 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 21 1 6 - 2 4 1 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 98 6 3 - 10 3 14 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 173 14 9 2 17 2 29 Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................................: 294 62 46 7 26 47 43 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ....................................................: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 30 67 27 83 101 53 57 14 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 5 54 29 15 1 22 17 26 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 16 2 42 7 15 10 - 20 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 6 10 10 - 4 11 4 49 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 306 208 186 106 236 238 129 384 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..........................: 306 208 186 106 236 238 129 384 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 170 135 270 179 220 185 146 209 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 7 4 4 2 9 6 4 4 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 37 1 5 35 2 16 25 1 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 6 5 - - 6 10 2 26 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 5 5 27 5 10 6 4 59 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 29 6 49 11 14 35 21 51 Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................................: 110 48 69 56 78 87 39 125 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ....................................................: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 132 - 77 11 45 15 99 30 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 25 3 - 1 75 16 13 2 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 22 4 - - 6 1 11 3 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 43 6 - 2 24 4 5 7 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 497 66 82 86 85 205 101 218 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..........................: 497 66 82 86 85 205 101 218 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 111 133 38 78 75 129 103 126 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: - 3 3 - 2 1 2 2 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 2 1 - 15 2 11 - 1 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 5 2 - - 2 2 3 6 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 21 5 - 5 6 8 9 1 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 55 22 2 13 5 23 25 3 Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................................: 76 61 17 18 31 39 44 47 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table 44. Farms by North American Industry Classification System: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total farms ....................................................: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 : Oilseed and grain farming (1111) ...............................: 34 27 40 - 22 170 - 11 Vegetable and melon farming (1112) .............................: 6 26 20 - 7 25 3 6 Fruit and tree nut farming (1113) ..............................: 2 15 - - 1 11 - 5 Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture : production (1114) .............................................: 2 7 6 1 26 23 6 1 Other crop farming (1119) ......................................: 125 177 110 15 111 282 24 205 Tobacco farming (11191) ......................................: - - - - - - - - Cotton farming (11192) .......................................: - - - - - - - - Sugarcane farming, hay farming, and all other : crop farming (11193, 11194, 11199) ..........................: 125 177 110 15 111 282 24 205 : Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111) ......................: 205 196 56 16 49 402 58 178 Cattle feedlots (112112) .......................................: 11 6 4 - - 7 6 3 Dairy cattle and milk production (11212) .......................: 8 7 1 - 2 39 - 3 Hog and pig farming (1122) .....................................: 2 2 - - 3 3 - 4 Poultry and egg production (1123) ..............................: 7 17 2 - 5 22 7 11 Sheep and goat farming (1124) ..................................: 25 24 2 4 7 44 10 22 Aquaculture and other animal : production (1125, 1129) .......................................: 34 70 35 8 35 141 28 46 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .............................................farms: 22,877 1,142 229 1,005 353 240 1,081 acres: 11,547,963 112,556 145,570 419,823 209,678 130,471 897,796 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 13,037 662 119 471 256 129 561 acres: 4,370,363 32,982 14,039 60,578 61,633 58,997 323,793 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .......................................farms: 21,588 1,084 216 978 337 228 1,009 acres: 7,737,908 67,059 85,084 370,809 162,730 79,370 583,529 Rented or leased land in farms ............................farms: 5,752 146 61 165 102 57 368 acres: 3,810,055 45,497 60,486 49,014 46,948 51,101 314,267 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................................farms: 17,125 996 168 840 251 183 713 acres: 4,752,115 50,401 41,071 308,987 80,280 63,807 431,757 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 8,602 564 89 378 164 82 284 acres: 940,413 11,890 (D) (D) 18,314 6,966 31,218 : Part owners ...............................................farms: 4,463 88 48 138 86 45 296 acres: 5,825,698 47,552 96,969 101,705 126,822 55,784 412,299 Owned land in farms .....................................acres: 2,985,793 16,658 44,013 61,822 82,450 15,563 151,772 Rented land in farms ....................................acres: 2,839,905 30,894 52,956 39,883 44,372 40,221 260,527 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 3,635 63 28 83 80 35 228 acres: 2,927,278 17,356 8,698 36,172 41,818 42,381 253,155 : Tenants ...................................................farms: 1,289 58 13 27 16 12 72 acres: 970,150 14,603 7,530 9,131 2,576 10,880 53,740 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 800 35 2 10 12 12 49 acres: 502,672 3,736 (D) (D) 1,501 9,650 39,420 : NUMBER OF TOTAL PRODUCERS : : Total producers ..........................................number: 44,714 2,119 422 2,109 670 393 2,119 : Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 6,958 333 68 236 114 116 307 2 producers ................................................: 12,840 720 136 601 195 102 627 3 producers ................................................: 1,621 45 19 72 19 17 70 4 producers ................................................: 910 31 5 61 22 4 64 5 or more producers ........................................: 548 13 1 35 3 1 13 : Total male producers ...................................number: 27,035 1,173 226 1,249 422 233 1,328 : Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 17,639 957 173 778 280 183 853 2 producers ..............................................: 2,533 75 22 97 43 23 114 3 producers ..............................................: 838 18 3 61 17 - 54 4 producers ..............................................: 193 - - 7 - 1 8 5 or more producers ......................................: 173 2 - 13 1 - 8 : Total female producers .................................number: 17,679 946 196 860 248 160 791 : Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 14,310 809 172 667 204 128 658 2 producers ..............................................: 1,105 44 12 78 17 16 57 3 producers ..............................................: 163 7 - 9 - - 5 4 producers ..............................................: 83 4 - 1 - - 1 5 or more producers ......................................: 58 1 - 1 2 - - : PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ : : Producers (see text) ...........................................: 43,333 2,084 421 2,038 661 391 2,079 : Sex of producers: : Male .........................................................: 26,384 1,161 226 1,226 420 232 1,304 Female .......................................................: 16,949 923 195 812 241 159 775 : Hired managers .................................................: 3,382 75 16 48 28 14 182 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................................: 17,793 691 248 558 253 168 870 Other ........................................................: 25,540 1,393 173 1,480 408 223 1,209 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................................: 33,141 1,851 371 1,432 464 276 1,645 Not on farm operated .........................................: 10,192 233 50 606 197 115 434 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................................: 16,151 703 196 620 203 156 768 Any ..........................................................: 27,182 1,381 225 1,418 458 235 1,311 1 to 49 days ...............................................: 4,566 205 30 239 83 34 228 50 to 99 days ..............................................: 2,032 87 33 111 4 15 98 100 to 199 days ............................................: 3,482 197 59 172 89 48 144 200 days or more ...........................................: 17,102 892 103 896 282 138 841 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................................: 2,561 90 52 209 16 20 73 3 or 4 years .................................................: 4,392 206 37 222 67 33 216 5 to 9 years .................................................: 9,426 453 118 487 119 106 438 10 years or more .............................................: 26,954 1,335 214 1,120 459 232 1,352 : Average years on present farm ................................: 19.0 18.0 17.5 17.7 21.5 17.6 20.2 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ..............................................: 7,099 295 77 457 98 69 317 6 to 10 years ................................................: 7,699 458 65 392 69 104 328 11 years or more .............................................: 28,535 1,331 279 1,189 494 218 1,434 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .............................................farms: 203 108 798 893 319 147 111 acres: 259,553 66,311 97,446 406,594 73,364 99,988 186,429 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 144 45 413 531 212 106 82 acres: 52,396 (D) 18,710 186,338 42,455 57,766 77,542 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .......................................farms: 197 107 772 853 299 139 109 acres: 185,547 42,294 81,270 248,255 45,536 81,172 153,344 Rented or leased land in farms ............................farms: 56 16 104 218 89 44 18 acres: 74,006 24,017 16,176 158,339 27,828 18,816 33,085 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................................farms: 147 92 694 675 230 103 93 acres: (D) (D) 74,118 157,076 28,328 50,256 (D) Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 93 35 337 366 143 67 64 acres: (D) 198 9,016 48,849 8,583 32,700 43,635 : Part owners ...............................................farms: 50 15 78 178 69 36 16 acres: 121,104 43,234 21,063 209,559 41,863 46,222 45,468 Owned land in farms .....................................acres: 67,872 19,232 7,152 91,179 17,208 30,916 14,843 Rented land in farms ....................................acres: 53,232 24,002 13,911 118,380 24,655 15,306 30,625 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 48 9 63 132 53 31 16 acres: 41,219 (D) 8,155 108,394 32,124 21,970 (D) : Tenants ...................................................farms: 6 1 26 40 20 8 2 acres: (D) (D) 2,265 39,959 3,173 3,510 (D) Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 3 1 13 33 16 8 2 acres: (D) (D) 1,539 29,095 1,748 3,096 (D) : NUMBER OF TOTAL PRODUCERS : : Total producers ..........................................number: 388 210 1,635 1,819 636 267 208 : Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 58 35 187 252 95 56 35 2 producers ................................................: 120 57 507 526 172 74 59 3 producers ................................................: 17 9 50 57 32 7 13 4 producers ................................................: 2 3 27 30 6 8 4 5 or more producers ........................................: 6 4 27 28 14 2 - : Total male producers ...................................number: 238 116 888 1,081 370 169 125 : Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 152 87 605 725 238 105 84 2 producers ..............................................: 31 6 83 92 30 27 10 3 producers ..............................................: 3 3 14 22 16 2 7 4 producers ..............................................: - 2 5 4 6 1 - 5 or more producers ......................................: 3 - 11 16 - - - : Total female producers .................................number: 150 94 747 738 266 98 83 : Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 133 66 566 540 226 76 73 2 producers ..............................................: 7 11 47 48 8 9 5 3 producers ..............................................: 1 2 14 6 8 - - 4 producers ..............................................: - - - 19 - 1 - 5 or more producers ......................................: - - 9 1 - - - : PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ : : Producers (see text) ...........................................: 381 204 1,567 1,707 615 265 208 : Sex of producers: : Male .........................................................: 235 112 861 1,036 370 168 125 Female .......................................................: 146 92 706 671 245 97 83 : Hired managers .................................................: 46 14 54 94 91 16 26 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................................: 171 70 592 527 287 145 128 Other ........................................................: 210 134 975 1,180 328 120 80 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................................: 304 164 1,333 1,303 476 198 125 Not on farm operated .........................................: 77 40 234 404 139 67 83 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................................: 140 65 575 555 237 121 88 Any ..........................................................: 241 139 992 1,152 378 144 120 1 to 49 days ...............................................: 61 29 195 147 77 28 36 50 to 99 days ..............................................: 14 17 67 103 29 12 24 100 to 199 days ............................................: 26 16 138 118 51 15 34 200 days or more ...........................................: 140 77 592 784 221 89 26 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................................: 30 2 62 143 44 8 4 3 or 4 years .................................................: 24 8 161 167 34 11 40 5 to 9 years .................................................: 93 68 352 362 123 51 53 10 years or more .............................................: 234 126 992 1,035 414 195 111 : Average years on present farm ................................: 18.1 19.1 19.3 18.2 20.6 23.3 17.5 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ..............................................: 52 23 247 324 91 19 46 6 to 10 years ................................................: 48 49 287 319 118 36 27 11 years or more .............................................: 281 132 1,033 1,064 406 210 135 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .............................................farms: 2,311 399 554 67 273 235 284 acres: 277,388 416,460 657,664 206,127 66,230 113,930 296,190 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 1,166 212 348 34 146 138 128 acres: 203,509 144,142 294,586 53,344 11,318 30,101 80,780 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .......................................farms: 2,188 372 503 61 266 221 247 acres: 142,098 325,524 432,708 168,060 52,960 95,254 192,726 Rented or leased land in farms ............................farms: 496 127 209 23 34 58 92 acres: 135,290 90,936 224,956 38,067 13,270 18,676 103,464 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................................farms: 1,815 272 345 44 239 177 192 acres: 70,242 170,434 217,764 111,236 43,597 58,527 64,061 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 764 137 169 17 123 97 71 acres: 38,329 (D) 56,506 (D) 3,938 (D) 12,171 : Part owners ...............................................farms: 373 100 158 17 27 44 55 acres: 172,609 224,303 329,177 93,161 20,086 51,536 214,900 Owned land in farms .....................................acres: 71,856 155,090 214,944 56,824 9,363 36,727 128,665 Rented land in farms ....................................acres: 100,753 69,213 114,233 36,337 10,723 14,809 86,235 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 310 71 143 15 19 38 48 acres: 136,431 107,696 184,466 47,292 6,304 13,729 63,619 : Tenants ...................................................farms: 123 27 51 6 7 14 37 acres: 34,537 21,723 110,723 1,730 2,547 3,867 17,229 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 92 4 36 2 4 3 9 acres: 28,749 (D) 53,614 (D) 1,076 (D) 4,990 : NUMBER OF TOTAL PRODUCERS : : Total producers ..........................................number: 4,341 869 1,131 129 499 456 578 : Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 661 135 190 29 78 75 67 2 producers ................................................: 1,440 184 268 25 170 135 169 3 producers ................................................: 121 35 34 4 19 4 30 4 producers ................................................: 54 33 39 7 6 8 11 5 or more producers ........................................: 35 12 23 2 - 13 7 : Total male producers ...................................number: 2,550 557 730 80 298 267 349 : Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 1,896 281 415 46 219 179 193 2 producers ..............................................: 200 61 73 8 20 24 60 3 producers ..............................................: 39 20 28 6 13 12 8 4 producers ..............................................: 20 7 14 - - 1 3 5 or more producers ......................................: 9 9 4 - - - - : Total female producers .................................number: 1,791 312 401 49 201 189 229 : Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 1,537 198 292 32 201 146 181 2 producers ..............................................: 100 30 33 7 - 14 21 3 producers ..............................................: 14 2 6 1 - 5 2 4 producers ..............................................: 3 - 1 - - - - 5 or more producers ......................................: - 6 3 - - - - : PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ : : Producers (see text) ...........................................: 4,260 788 1,076 127 499 441 567 : Sex of producers: : Male .........................................................: 2,513 526 699 80 298 255 346 Female .......................................................: 1,747 262 377 47 201 186 221 : Hired managers .................................................: 291 85 167 21 4 53 44 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................................: 1,695 372 550 58 194 228 292 Other ........................................................: 2,565 416 526 69 305 213 275 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................................: 3,653 485 808 68 372 345 434 Not on farm operated .........................................: 607 303 268 59 127 96 133 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................................: 1,494 273 456 48 210 157 213 Any ..........................................................: 2,766 515 620 79 289 284 354 1 to 49 days ...............................................: 343 83 109 11 67 65 42 50 to 99 days ..............................................: 167 56 45 17 40 53 29 100 to 199 days ............................................: 328 100 73 12 23 64 38 200 days or more ...........................................: 1,928 276 393 39 159 102 245 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................................: 323 68 38 5 29 28 29 3 or 4 years .................................................: 542 75 136 8 18 29 38 5 to 9 years .................................................: 1,004 128 128 25 117 106 162 10 years or more .............................................: 2,391 517 774 89 335 278 338 : Average years on present farm ................................: 16.7 20.3 21.7 24.9 21.4 20.5 19.0 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ..............................................: 822 122 118 11 55 59 81 6 to 10 years ................................................: 862 124 139 20 109 66 118 11 years or more .............................................: 2,576 542 819 96 335 316 368 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .............................................farms: 727 545 718 499 696 679 448 968 acres: 276,073 275,247 199,547 212,600 545,260 262,180 180,152 107,727 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 466 291 432 290 435 454 276 465 acres: 74,567 165,603 19,873 125,314 123,368 171,192 132,964 36,706 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .......................................farms: 711 517 691 443 650 643 418 957 acres: 221,804 192,940 113,870 148,616 289,796 184,861 107,066 74,121 Rented or leased land in farms ............................farms: 144 176 148 134 230 187 128 97 acres: 54,269 82,307 85,677 63,984 255,464 77,319 73,086 33,606 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................................farms: 583 369 570 365 466 492 320 871 acres: 144,428 108,047 72,292 90,043 147,413 74,691 41,316 58,626 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 353 150 323 204 255 300 168 401 acres: 29,851 36,401 7,021 39,875 21,083 31,628 24,478 8,717 : Part owners ...............................................farms: 128 148 121 78 184 151 98 86 acres: 125,363 158,066 115,612 102,419 367,093 171,759 119,564 43,559 Owned land in farms .....................................acres: 77,376 84,893 41,578 58,573 142,383 110,170 65,750 15,495 Rented land in farms ....................................acres: 47,987 73,173 74,034 43,846 224,710 61,589 53,814 28,064 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 109 124 94 65 154 133 87 57 acres: 44,502 123,594 12,532 77,357 85,253 127,992 91,144 24,944 : Tenants ...................................................farms: 16 28 27 56 46 36 30 11 acres: 6,282 9,134 11,643 20,138 30,754 15,730 19,272 5,542 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 4 17 15 21 26 21 21 7 acres: 214 5,608 320 8,082 17,032 11,572 17,342 3,045 : NUMBER OF TOTAL PRODUCERS : : Total producers ..........................................number: 1,543 1,126 1,304 989 1,343 1,370 862 1,800 : Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 172 169 206 177 226 182 149 290 2 producers ................................................: 428 256 459 239 370 392 237 590 3 producers ................................................: 57 56 34 35 49 46 38 50 4 producers ................................................: 39 53 17 31 39 36 14 23 5 or more producers ........................................: 31 11 2 17 12 23 10 15 : Total male producers ...................................number: 975 737 725 655 823 862 569 950 : Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 553 360 602 377 565 511 352 759 2 producers ..............................................: 88 118 36 67 61 95 63 71 3 producers ..............................................: 54 32 17 17 30 19 13 15 4 producers ..............................................: 10 2 - 7 - 17 10 1 5 or more producers ......................................: 8 7 - 11 8 7 1 - : Total female producers .................................number: 568 389 579 334 520 508 293 850 : Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 455 283 525 258 439 421 237 701 2 producers ..............................................: 25 46 24 26 31 40 21 46 3 producers ..............................................: 9 2 2 8 3 1 2 1 4 producers ..............................................: 9 2 - - - 1 2 11 5 or more producers ......................................: - - - - 2 - - 2 : PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ : : Producers (see text) ...........................................: 1,479 1,105 1,302 952 1,317 1,340 833 1,772 : Sex of producers: : Male .........................................................: 947 724 725 633 804 844 552 945 Female .......................................................: 532 381 577 319 513 496 281 827 : Hired managers .................................................: 101 127 48 129 62 150 141 16 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................................: 484 436 509 500 628 496 447 543 Other ........................................................: 995 669 793 452 689 844 386 1,229 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................................: 1,012 686 1,177 662 915 1,107 657 1,471 Not on farm operated .........................................: 467 419 125 290 402 233 176 301 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................................: 447 401 487 434 532 411 360 671 Any ..........................................................: 1,032 704 815 518 785 929 473 1,101 1 to 49 days ...............................................: 180 131 140 100 135 155 57 188 50 to 99 days ..............................................: 51 49 47 48 93 86 25 88 100 to 199 days ............................................: 128 54 99 54 75 122 40 138 200 days or more ...........................................: 673 470 529 316 482 566 351 687 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................................: 96 61 78 50 69 90 49 57 3 or 4 years .................................................: 214 70 200 74 100 157 61 210 5 to 9 years .................................................: 326 303 338 205 320 248 150 448 10 years or more .............................................: 843 671 686 623 828 845 573 1,057 : Average years on present farm ................................: 17.6 20.2 15.7 19.8 20.2 19.3 21.1 18.1 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ..............................................: 343 137 278 134 192 254 105 334 6 to 10 years ................................................: 260 246 249 179 229 228 116 367 11 years or more .............................................: 876 722 775 639 896 858 612 1,071 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .............................................farms: 989 306 219 229 358 454 415 446 acres: 324,990 131,616 249,015 104,847 166,920 308,562 344,412 327,714 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 524 166 128 135 273 296 240 261 acres: 177,685 32,381 136,707 50,547 125,298 238,687 164,374 84,770 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .......................................farms: 934 295 193 210 326 411 374 425 acres: 128,012 108,558 123,682 80,413 101,817 140,558 146,122 256,708 Rented or leased land in farms ............................farms: 212 94 93 62 175 180 134 95 acres: 196,978 23,058 125,333 24,434 65,103 168,004 198,290 71,006 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................................farms: 777 212 126 167 183 274 281 351 acres: 76,417 72,908 54,395 58,512 38,223 26,284 65,870 183,885 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 342 105 47 90 125 129 129 181 acres: 12,982 16,316 12,012 23,763 24,959 15,884 10,182 39,042 : Part owners ...............................................farms: 157 83 67 43 143 137 93 74 acres: 172,600 54,891 158,537 34,040 121,542 244,131 171,189 129,780 Owned land in farms .....................................acres: 51,595 35,650 69,287 21,901 63,594 114,274 80,252 72,823 Rented land in farms ....................................acres: 121,005 19,241 89,250 12,139 57,948 129,857 90,937 56,957 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 138 54 59 32 127 131 84 63 acres: 130,282 14,005 94,066 23,133 93,971 190,588 90,505 40,512 : Tenants ...................................................farms: 55 11 26 19 32 43 41 21 acres: 75,973 3,817 36,083 12,295 7,155 38,147 107,353 14,049 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 44 7 22 13 21 36 27 17 acres: 34,421 2,060 30,629 3,651 6,368 32,215 63,687 5,216 : NUMBER OF TOTAL PRODUCERS : : Total producers ..........................................number: 2,031 589 390 402 694 845 840 872 : Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 311 95 94 86 109 170 132 152 2 producers ................................................: 539 163 94 118 195 226 210 211 3 producers ................................................: 72 37 18 22 36 37 50 51 4 producers ................................................: 42 3 11 2 9 9 7 25 5 or more producers ........................................: 25 8 2 1 9 12 16 7 : Total male producers ...................................number: 1,208 329 235 261 475 546 544 569 : Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 704 212 156 184 273 371 289 324 2 producers ..............................................: 125 44 29 32 56 44 56 59 3 producers ..............................................: 38 7 7 3 21 23 31 35 4 producers ..............................................: 8 2 - 1 4 2 4 3 5 or more producers ......................................: 17 - - - 2 2 5 1 : Total female producers .................................number: 823 260 155 141 219 299 296 303 : Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 640 213 111 133 191 247 229 240 2 producers ..............................................: 31 11 22 4 10 14 20 28 3 producers ..............................................: 3 7 - - - - 7 1 4 producers ..............................................: - 1 - - 2 6 - 1 5 or more producers ......................................: 20 - - - - - 1 - : PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ : : Producers (see text) ...........................................: 1,873 576 388 400 679 817 794 855 : Sex of producers: : Male .........................................................: 1,124 328 235 260 468 540 508 557 Female .......................................................: 749 248 153 140 211 277 286 298 : Hired managers .................................................: 79 47 35 33 110 104 46 48 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................................: 615 275 172 196 308 370 363 330 Other ........................................................: 1,258 301 216 204 371 447 431 525 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................................: 1,186 512 239 299 478 644 544 498 Not on farm operated .........................................: 687 64 149 101 201 173 250 357 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................................: 830 235 188 156 260 336 340 297 Any ..........................................................: 1,043 341 200 244 419 481 454 558 1 to 49 days ...............................................: 185 48 60 62 109 65 48 113 50 to 99 days ..............................................: 59 15 10 4 42 40 55 28 100 to 199 days ............................................: 116 59 28 35 71 56 58 84 200 days or more ...........................................: 683 219 102 143 197 320 293 333 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................................: 129 51 18 11 12 42 25 45 3 or 4 years .................................................: 189 57 31 32 50 39 58 111 5 to 9 years .................................................: 364 112 95 88 159 148 163 213 10 years or more .............................................: 1,191 356 244 269 458 588 548 486 : Average years on present farm ................................: 18.9 19.1 20.2 20.5 21.3 22.9 21.7 19.0 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ..............................................: 315 101 51 36 77 81 72 148 6 to 10 years ................................................: 316 70 73 76 110 138 157 145 11 years or more .............................................: 1,242 405 264 288 492 598 565 562 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FARMS : : Land in farms .............................................farms: 461 574 276 44 268 1,169 142 495 acres: 729,407 171,424 443,958 1,605 112,072 459,167 45,321 428,579 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 266 336 139 14 161 712 56 318 acres: 109,288 53,527 196,858 (D) 65,452 225,508 4,783 48,753 : OWNED AND RENTED LAND IN FARMS : : Owned land in farms .......................................farms: 428 548 256 43 254 1,084 129 462 acres: 631,631 87,550 281,289 (D) 67,221 327,086 (D) 298,529 Rented or leased land in farms ............................farms: 142 157 114 1 81 317 38 130 acres: 97,776 83,874 162,669 (D) 44,851 132,081 (D) 130,050 : TENURE : : Full owners ...............................................farms: 319 417 162 43 187 852 104 365 acres: 513,727 (D) 118,053 (D) 41,396 205,045 (D) 186,818 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 161 222 58 14 91 454 39 217 acres: 52,662 7,911 18,050 (D) 10,631 65,967 (D) 18,492 : Part owners ...............................................farms: 109 131 94 - 67 232 25 97 acres: 189,402 86,820 286,343 - 59,056 223,890 23,727 190,899 Owned land in farms .....................................acres: 117,904 36,030 163,236 - 25,825 122,041 9,303 111,711 Rented land in farms ....................................acres: 71,498 50,790 123,107 - 33,231 101,849 14,424 79,188 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 87 105 68 - 58 200 12 81 acres: 52,604 43,895 144,244 - 46,521 143,269 2,583 25,935 : Tenants ...................................................farms: 33 26 20 1 14 85 13 33 acres: 26,278 (D) 39,562 (D) 11,620 30,232 (D) 50,862 Harvested cropland ......................................farms: 18 9 13 - 12 58 5 20 acres: 4,022 1,721 34,564 - 8,300 16,272 (D) 4,326 : NUMBER OF TOTAL PRODUCERS : : Total producers ..........................................number: 925 1,014 611 85 527 2,401 265 888 : Farms by number of producers: : 1 producer .................................................: 127 207 83 17 106 378 43 150 2 producers ................................................: 256 312 124 21 114 609 83 307 3 producers ................................................: 45 41 34 2 17 81 10 29 4 producers ................................................: 20 11 19 - 13 50 4 8 5 or more producers ........................................: 13 3 16 4 18 51 2 1 : Total male producers ...................................number: 539 610 393 39 344 1,519 148 531 : Farms by number of male producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 344 456 191 31 162 891 115 408 2 producers ..............................................: 52 55 40 4 56 125 12 46 3 producers ..............................................: 19 8 28 - 10 53 3 9 4 producers ..............................................: 6 5 4 - 10 17 - 1 5 or more producers ......................................: 2 - 3 - - 23 - - : Total female producers .................................number: 386 404 218 46 183 882 117 357 : Farms by number of female producers: : 1 producer ...............................................: 304 369 167 30 128 660 97 327 2 producers ..............................................: 19 16 8 2 11 65 8 13 3 producers ..............................................: 2 1 9 4 11 8 - - 4 producers ..............................................: 7 - 2 - - 7 1 1 5 or more producers ......................................: 2 - - - - 8 - - : PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ : : Producers (see text) ...........................................: 906 1,010 573 81 509 2,243 263 887 : Sex of producers: : Male .........................................................: 534 609 378 39 341 1,419 147 530 Female .......................................................: 372 401 195 42 168 824 116 357 : Hired managers .................................................: 120 77 101 - 92 257 21 69 : Primary occupation: : Farming ......................................................: 480 429 300 32 202 1,070 98 413 Other ........................................................: 426 581 273 49 307 1,173 165 474 : Place of residence: : On farm operated .............................................: 718 871 350 62 308 1,707 192 739 Not on farm operated .........................................: 188 139 223 19 201 536 71 148 : Days worked off farm: : None .........................................................: 345 321 253 24 188 904 88 365 Any ..........................................................: 561 689 320 57 321 1,339 175 522 1 to 49 days ...............................................: 142 107 51 8 32 226 30 82 50 to 99 days ..............................................: 49 49 17 - 38 70 9 39 100 to 199 days ............................................: 65 83 41 2 49 189 21 70 200 days or more ...........................................: 305 450 211 47 202 854 115 331 : Years on present farm: : 2 years or less ..............................................: 74 22 37 11 36 146 19 60 3 or 4 years .................................................: 101 118 28 - 48 257 19 96 5 to 9 years .................................................: 163 223 133 19 83 400 55 177 10 years or more .............................................: 568 647 375 51 342 1,440 170 554 : Average years on present farm ................................: 18.2 17.8 21.7 16.6 20.8 18.8 17.9 18.9 : Years operating any farm: : 5 years or less ..............................................: 181 135 60 19 83 425 38 117 6 to 10 years ................................................: 115 184 117 16 68 284 49 169 11 years or more .............................................: 610 691 396 46 358 1,534 176 601 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Idaho : Ada : Adams : Bannock : Bear Lake : Benewah : Bingham ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ - Con. : : Years operating any farm: - Con. : : Average years on any farm ....................................: 21.7 20.0 22.0 20.2 23.1 19.7 22.9 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................................: 832 40 - 59 4 - 31 25 to 34 years ...............................................: 3,027 72 26 149 49 25 163 35 to 44 years ...............................................: 6,911 283 29 365 110 47 450 45 to 54 years ...............................................: 7,320 372 36 352 108 83 403 55 to 64 years ...............................................: 10,123 560 125 431 154 85 410 65 to 74 years ...............................................: 10,095 497 148 441 163 106 462 75 years and over ............................................: 5,025 260 57 241 73 45 160 : Average age ..................................................: 56.6 58.3 61.9 55.5 57.2 57.9 54.2 : Young producers (see text) .....................................: 3,859 112 26 208 53 25 194 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ...............: 1,341 68 12 42 17 5 68 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............................: 290 6 16 45 1 11 26 Asian ........................................................: 144 3 2 4 - - 5 Black or African American ....................................: 19 6 - - 1 - - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....................: 42 2 - 1 - - 4 White ........................................................: 42,509 2,044 395 1,975 659 375 2,031 More than one race reported ..................................: 329 23 8 13 - 5 13 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in Reserves or National Guard (see text) ....................: 39,671 1,874 387 1,848 644 349 1,949 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ....................: 3,662 210 34 190 17 42 130 : Number of persons living in : producers' households .........................................: 86,167 3,757 658 4,097 1,307 810 4,758 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions .........................................: 37,172 1,871 392 1,733 600 350 1,802 Land use and/or crop decisions ...............................: 32,598 1,589 369 1,477 475 319 1,596 Livestock decisions ..........................................: 26,379 1,325 299 1,224 412 210 1,284 Marketing decisions (see text) ...............................: 25,823 1,099 270 1,052 369 241 1,342 Record keeping and/or financial management ...................: 30,863 1,505 314 1,320 446 290 1,565 Estate planning or succession planning .......................: 23,727 1,113 271 1,120 347 232 1,141 : INTERNET ACCESS : : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................................: 19,417 1,031 207 855 289 203 966 Dial-up ....................................................: 537 54 11 15 9 2 28 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .............: 10,022 595 105 478 170 69 484 Cellular data plan (see text) ..............................: 12,438 620 134 512 185 103 661 Satellite ..................................................: 5,457 231 38 237 65 86 271 Don't know .................................................: 905 31 19 24 11 19 56 Other ......................................................: 304 13 6 2 - 7 14 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by : one producer's household and/or : extended family ..........................................farms: 21,570 1,103 219 940 338 224 1,016 acres: 9,774,644 100,816 91,081 371,547 202,474 115,366 789,900 Limited Liability Company .................................farms: 3,390 183 26 140 46 25 155 acres: 2,655,263 27,039 21,038 71,860 36,110 12,088 250,456 : OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ......................................farms: 18,427 977 200 807 300 183 881 acres: 4,611,219 56,070 65,412 (D) (D) (D) (D) : Partnership ...............................................farms: 1,752 61 8 100 20 21 128 acres: 2,798,624 17,127 10,888 51,861 52,129 21,154 226,343 : Corporation: : Family held .............................................farms: 1,883 79 21 58 26 18 47 acres: 2,758,073 (D) 69,270 53,237 27,952 15,735 34,953 Other than family held ..................................farms: 262 4 - 3 3 4 9 acres: 275,169 (D) - 2,076 9,640 (D) 12,911 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ........................farms: 553 21 - 37 4 14 16 acres: 1,104,878 511 - (D) (D) (D) (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Blaine : Boise : Bonner : Bonneville : Boundary : Butte : Camas ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ - Con. : : Years operating any farm: - Con. : : Average years on any farm ....................................: 23.1 21.2 21.5 20.2 22.6 25.9 20.5 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................................: - - 20 39 23 6 2 25 to 34 years ...............................................: 15 5 105 108 24 12 26 35 to 44 years ...............................................: 62 27 152 353 70 41 22 45 to 54 years ...............................................: 81 30 261 278 130 58 38 55 to 64 years ...............................................: 84 59 412 401 138 51 41 65 to 74 years ...............................................: 75 63 424 366 157 67 43 75 years and over ............................................: 64 20 193 162 73 30 36 : Average age ..................................................: 58.7 59.7 58.8 55.2 57.6 56.6 57.1 : Young producers (see text) .....................................: 15 5 125 147 47 18 28 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ...............: 11 11 49 32 14 12 2 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............................: - - 15 5 3 - 1 Asian ........................................................: - 2 - 22 2 2 - Black or African American ....................................: - - - - - - - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....................: - - - - - - - White ........................................................: 378 201 1,539 1,669 603 262 206 More than one race reported ..................................: 3 1 13 11 7 1 1 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in Reserves or National Guard (see text) ....................: 358 181 1,369 1,585 563 240 195 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ....................: 23 23 198 122 52 25 13 : Number of persons living in : producers' households .........................................: 690 392 2,734 3,650 1,070 590 441 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions .........................................: 340 190 1,340 1,434 535 235 154 Land use and/or crop decisions ...............................: 304 160 1,201 1,307 490 224 163 Livestock decisions ..........................................: 245 144 1,006 1,062 361 168 84 Marketing decisions (see text) ...............................: 236 110 905 964 364 189 121 Record keeping and/or financial management ...................: 285 132 1,051 1,220 418 220 140 Estate planning or succession planning .......................: 213 98 882 977 287 166 124 : INTERNET ACCESS : : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................................: 195 87 649 757 265 125 97 Dial-up ....................................................: 6 7 15 31 9 13 1 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .............: 88 47 203 465 131 85 37 Cellular data plan (see text) ..............................: 102 60 363 508 157 80 65 Satellite ..................................................: 87 26 269 198 74 10 30 Don't know .................................................: 8 4 18 20 6 5 6 Other ......................................................: - - 22 11 10 - - : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by : one producer's household and/or : extended family ..........................................farms: 178 104 761 834 307 130 105 acres: 191,022 55,527 87,047 344,005 66,622 79,791 168,465 Limited Liability Company .................................farms: 44 8 106 140 31 26 27 acres: 56,855 224 26,814 118,418 5,380 27,197 115,686 : OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ......................................farms: 142 90 654 720 247 116 77 acres: 83,451 53,585 55,614 162,654 25,219 53,833 (D) : Partnership ...............................................farms: 23 3 44 69 9 17 12 acres: 53,872 11,720 10,379 99,795 2,999 21,256 87,223 : Corporation: : Family held .............................................farms: 24 11 49 75 51 12 21 acres: (D) 792 (D) 99,505 (D) (D) 44,200 Other than family held ..................................farms: 3 - 2 19 3 2 - acres: (D) - (D) 10,923 (D) (D) - : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ........................farms: 11 4 49 10 9 - 1 acres: 18,915 214 14,130 33,717 577 - (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Canyon : Caribou : Cassia : Clark : Clearwater : Custer : Elmore ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ - Con. : : Years operating any farm: - Con. : : Average years on any farm ....................................: 19.5 23.1 24.8 28.2 23.0 24.6 21.9 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................................: 116 29 6 - 11 10 12 25 to 34 years ...............................................: 295 59 111 11 6 30 62 35 to 44 years ...............................................: 691 122 220 5 22 59 79 45 to 54 years ...............................................: 865 150 202 21 72 68 100 55 to 64 years ...............................................: 1,035 186 231 21 140 104 123 65 to 74 years ...............................................: 877 119 224 41 147 111 130 75 years and over ............................................: 381 123 82 28 101 59 61 : Average age ..................................................: 55.1 55.7 54.0 62.7 63.1 57.5 55.8 : Young producers (see text) .....................................: 411 88 117 11 17 40 74 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ...............: 193 13 47 - 6 2 38 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............................: 29 - 2 - 2 3 8 Asian ........................................................: 24 1 3 3 - - 1 Black or African American ....................................: 5 - 1 - - - - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....................: 4 - 1 - - - - White ........................................................: 4,163 787 1,067 124 491 436 555 More than one race reported ..................................: 35 - 2 - 6 2 3 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in Reserves or National Guard (see text) ....................: 3,865 738 1,027 120 449 415 486 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ....................: 395 50 49 7 50 26 81 : Number of persons living in : producers' households .........................................: 8,421 1,752 2,416 222 761 743 1,035 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions .........................................: 3,760 662 921 98 444 371 481 Land use and/or crop decisions ...............................: 3,267 556 788 84 405 356 414 Livestock decisions ..........................................: 2,864 455 667 84 313 314 423 Marketing decisions (see text) ...............................: 2,569 505 700 68 309 293 329 Record keeping and/or financial management ...................: 3,041 558 791 93 364 324 382 Estate planning or succession planning .......................: 2,235 442 674 69 311 268 336 : INTERNET ACCESS : : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................................: 2,037 332 500 48 198 207 233 Dial-up ....................................................: 53 13 5 - 3 8 11 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .............: 986 158 285 23 75 132 87 Cellular data plan (see text) ..............................: 1,301 205 347 29 102 112 140 Satellite ..................................................: 642 94 122 12 86 29 61 Don't know .................................................: 113 16 22 8 15 20 18 Other ......................................................: 46 4 3 - - - 2 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by : one producer's household and/or : extended family ..........................................farms: 2,210 368 514 58 257 221 270 acres: 250,586 322,896 516,204 120,313 57,264 106,669 275,996 Limited Liability Company .................................farms: 337 99 124 16 20 53 56 acres: 65,559 106,827 183,715 38,198 7,874 45,163 56,507 : OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ......................................farms: 1,958 294 394 39 233 184 221 acres: 133,991 182,853 209,091 (D) 37,283 52,454 (D) : Partnership ...............................................farms: 104 32 82 11 17 20 38 acres: 38,455 82,814 231,166 38,840 9,565 15,853 132,496 : Corporation: : Family held .............................................farms: 177 60 60 11 10 22 16 acres: 98,118 94,908 (D) (D) 17,520 31,222 71,914 Other than family held ..................................farms: 28 - 7 2 - - 3 acres: 4,884 - (D) (D) - - 12,015 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ........................farms: 44 13 11 4 13 9 6 acres: 1,940 55,885 8,701 (D) 1,862 14,401 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Franklin : Fremont : Gem : Gooding : Idaho : Jefferson : Jerome : Kootenai ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ - Con. : : Years operating any farm: - Con. : : Average years on any farm ....................................: 19.8 23.6 19.2 24.0 22.9 21.3 24.0 20.1 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................................: 37 12 15 42 15 54 12 15 25 to 34 years ...............................................: 112 91 60 90 127 100 74 70 35 to 44 years ...............................................: 331 160 220 175 152 288 172 223 45 to 54 years ...............................................: 251 157 204 134 187 262 123 300 55 to 64 years ...............................................: 277 264 354 192 277 276 202 424 65 to 74 years ...............................................: 290 289 280 220 342 251 183 480 75 years and over ............................................: 181 132 169 99 217 109 67 260 : Average age ..................................................: 54.7 57.5 57.4 54.5 58.5 53.1 54.7 60.0 : Young producers (see text) .....................................: 149 103 75 132 142 154 86 85 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ...............: 19 11 27 73 15 22 60 36 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............................: 6 2 4 2 9 - 3 10 Asian ........................................................: 1 - 6 4 - - 1 7 Black or African American ....................................: - 1 - 1 - - - - Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....................: 2 - 5 - 5 2 - 1 White ........................................................: 1,469 1,100 1,274 945 1,289 1,337 823 1,739 More than one race reported ..................................: 1 2 13 - 14 1 6 15 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in Reserves or National Guard (see text) ....................: 1,400 1,013 1,161 895 1,165 1,224 777 1,562 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ....................: 79 92 141 57 152 116 56 210 : Number of persons living in : producers' households .........................................: 3,475 2,525 2,303 2,060 2,403 2,988 1,760 3,038 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions .........................................: 1,246 822 1,126 816 1,145 1,164 736 1,566 Land use and/or crop decisions ...............................: 1,076 741 1,005 682 1,013 1,048 640 1,278 Livestock decisions ..........................................: 903 564 851 612 809 887 527 1,030 Marketing decisions (see text) ...............................: 803 611 811 626 782 854 590 905 Record keeping and/or financial management ...................: 1,010 751 901 713 935 957 625 1,197 Estate planning or succession planning .......................: 787 597 718 530 694 742 470 982 : INTERNET ACCESS : : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................................: 581 464 610 409 553 610 392 802 Dial-up ....................................................: 5 16 22 18 8 24 2 19 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .............: 328 263 285 180 281 361 199 304 Cellular data plan (see text) ..............................: 359 297 378 270 347 407 283 478 Satellite ..................................................: 170 98 221 130 178 134 110 333 Don't know .................................................: 24 31 32 15 17 25 16 36 Other ......................................................: 2 1 12 16 3 3 7 12 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by : one producer's household and/or : extended family ..........................................farms: 678 504 712 459 663 660 413 938 acres: 249,650 216,362 172,566 180,413 507,305 230,822 156,301 102,344 Limited Liability Company .................................farms: 137 130 69 102 68 116 77 130 acres: 64,109 68,811 60,707 99,078 70,018 68,856 38,344 29,954 : OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ......................................farms: 552 383 660 370 584 591 318 854 acres: 110,921 107,750 116,031 69,837 357,837 (D) 46,449 84,919 : Partnership ...............................................farms: 61 68 19 66 47 49 57 30 acres: 39,511 65,068 (D) 83,642 74,225 65,139 58,849 7,115 : Corporation: : Family held .............................................farms: 83 70 28 43 34 30 63 31 acres: 105,871 (D) 34,607 43,021 62,884 56,010 62,533 11,405 Other than family held ..................................farms: 6 2 4 11 12 8 6 11 acres: 5,273 (D) 332 15,687 13,936 27,804 12,073 1,746 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ........................farms: 25 22 7 9 19 1 4 42 acres: 14,497 3,605 (D) 413 36,378 (D) 248 2,542 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Latah : Lemhi : Lewis : Lincoln : Madison : Minidoka : Nez Perce : Oneida ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ - Con. : : Years operating any farm: - Con. : : Average years on any farm ....................................: 21.0 22.6 22.9 23.8 24.2 25.3 24.4 23.1 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................................: 15 12 6 4 9 16 12 8 25 to 34 years ...............................................: 92 50 24 35 55 48 40 53 35 to 44 years ...............................................: 277 77 52 46 119 177 83 105 45 to 54 years ...............................................: 212 69 44 81 154 142 91 103 55 to 64 years ...............................................: 473 131 88 115 129 193 250 208 65 to 74 years ...............................................: 556 176 127 75 151 173 169 251 75 years and over ............................................: 248 61 47 44 62 68 149 127 : Average age ..................................................: 59.5 57.8 59.2 56.3 55.1 54.8 60.3 59.7 : Young producers (see text) .....................................: 107 62 30 39 64 64 52 61 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ...............: 23 10 - 31 3 92 6 21 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............................: 7 7 4 5 8 - 9 - Asian ........................................................: 19 - - - 1 - 2 - Black or African American ....................................: - - - - - - - 1 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....................: 1 - - - - - 1 - White ........................................................: 1,820 568 384 394 660 815 779 836 More than one race reported ..................................: 26 1 - 1 10 2 3 18 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in Reserves or National Guard (see text) ....................: 1,648 531 360 377 658 774 716 770 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ....................: 225 45 28 23 21 43 78 85 : Number of persons living in : producers' households .........................................: 3,443 932 680 871 1,781 1,735 1,434 1,721 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions .........................................: 1,480 512 317 329 604 682 648 685 Land use and/or crop decisions ...............................: 1,392 434 272 307 517 621 549 586 Livestock decisions ..........................................: 756 439 152 286 270 477 444 504 Marketing decisions (see text) ...............................: 938 359 208 290 460 564 497 457 Record keeping and/or financial management ...................: 1,250 413 297 310 515 621 585 593 Estate planning or succession planning .......................: 910 285 207 258 386 442 454 454 : INTERNET ACCESS : : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................................: 814 266 172 193 325 381 338 312 Dial-up ....................................................: 17 8 - 2 3 13 1 9 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .............: 362 149 74 77 212 235 171 206 Cellular data plan (see text) ..............................: 528 185 109 114 239 270 235 210 Satellite ..................................................: 225 91 43 74 79 74 108 40 Don't know .................................................: 43 4 15 6 12 10 21 7 Other ......................................................: 27 4 - 1 1 9 10 5 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by : one producer's household and/or : extended family ..........................................farms: 943 299 206 206 316 428 382 401 acres: 256,299 124,840 198,803 97,092 146,827 226,587 301,428 235,932 Limited Liability Company .................................farms: 122 18 18 25 71 56 54 47 acres: 40,183 20,976 59,302 20,946 45,584 123,887 52,154 55,252 : OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ......................................farms: 822 270 155 166 219 359 311 333 acres: 172,112 (D) 96,269 50,186 (D) (D) 141,822 121,235 : Partnership ...............................................farms: 74 15 26 27 52 30 60 43 acres: 77,083 28,138 91,470 (D) 39,457 113,849 128,977 107,751 : Corporation: : Family held .............................................farms: 46 13 25 31 74 58 23 37 acres: 39,109 19,466 (D) 34,315 66,109 110,340 49,430 77,505 Other than family held ..................................farms: 8 4 3 4 11 5 6 4 acres: 1,022 198 (D) 1,400 10,350 1,982 318 10,474 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ........................farms: 39 4 10 1 2 2 15 29 acres: 35,664 (D) 2,669 (D) (D) (D) 23,865 10,749 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table 45. Selected Operation and Producer Characteristics: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Item : Owyhee : Payette : Power : Shoshone : Teton : Twin Falls : Valley : Washington ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRODUCER CHARACTERISTICS 1/ - Con. : : Years operating any farm: - Con. : : Average years on any farm ....................................: 22.1 21.2 24.1 17.5 23.1 21.7 20.1 23.0 : Age group: : Under 25 years ...............................................: 42 17 10 - 10 39 8 14 25 to 34 years ...............................................: 77 92 86 4 35 180 8 71 35 to 44 years ...............................................: 144 179 81 21 54 451 38 77 45 to 54 years ...............................................: 174 173 92 17 108 355 58 121 55 to 64 years ...............................................: 200 218 122 12 94 542 69 222 65 to 74 years ...............................................: 195 226 134 13 128 448 46 231 75 years and over ............................................: 74 105 48 14 80 228 36 151 : Average age ..................................................: 53.7 55.5 54.3 56.0 58.3 54.8 58.0 59.7 : Young producers (see text) .....................................: 119 109 96 4 45 219 16 85 : Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin ...............: 43 30 8 2 2 130 5 30 : Producers by race: : American Indian or Alaska Native .............................: 21 5 5 - 2 6 - 2 Asian ........................................................: 2 11 3 - - 6 5 2 Black or African American ....................................: - 2 - - - - - 1 Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ....................: 5 - - 2 - 6 - - White ........................................................: 860 978 564 75 507 2,219 255 859 More than one race reported ..................................: 18 14 1 4 - 6 3 23 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in Reserves or National Guard (see text) ....................: 827 926 548 74 475 2,105 230 813 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ....................: 79 84 25 7 34 138 33 74 : Number of persons living in : producers' households .........................................: 1,668 1,999 1,263 136 1,119 4,481 452 1,596 : On farm involvement in decisionmaking: : Day-to-day decisions .........................................: 789 917 487 72 433 1,877 228 778 Land use and/or crop decisions ...............................: 667 819 416 58 389 1,665 177 702 Livestock decisions ..........................................: 655 698 221 65 231 1,284 183 587 Marketing decisions (see text) ...............................: 577 682 328 54 254 1,395 159 584 Record keeping and/or financial management ...................: 670 751 429 62 355 1,592 182 690 Estate planning or succession planning .......................: 510 561 312 56 277 1,096 153 540 : INTERNET ACCESS : : Farms with- : Internet access ..............................................: 390 494 229 36 214 1,011 115 425 Dial-up ....................................................: 17 13 7 - 7 14 7 11 Broadband (DSL, cable, fiber optic) (see text) .............: 159 317 139 15 123 575 56 248 Cellular data plan (see text) ..............................: 237 325 137 12 154 730 68 280 Satellite ..................................................: 139 95 45 31 35 215 33 88 Don't know .................................................: 25 17 10 - 20 53 4 23 Other ......................................................: 15 7 1 - 2 16 - 10 : TYPE OF ORGANIZATION : : Operation more than 50 percent owned by : one producer's household and/or : extended family ..........................................farms: 439 559 255 43 233 1,062 138 476 acres: 642,757 129,482 418,428 1,590 86,742 344,146 42,467 391,870 Limited Liability Company .................................farms: 59 71 50 16 61 163 31 37 acres: 110,443 19,312 111,922 316 52,727 82,747 5,759 80,868 : OPERATION'S LEGAL STATUS FOR TAX PURPOSES : : Family or individual ......................................farms: 374 516 185 40 208 890 117 433 acres: 170,616 67,372 164,302 (D) 68,167 122,893 26,110 (D) : Partnership ...............................................farms: 26 14 47 3 15 82 9 13 acres: 110,531 2,210 225,398 45 15,551 111,371 3,162 72,092 : Corporation: : Family held .............................................farms: 52 40 33 1 25 141 10 44 acres: (D) (D) 43,776 (D) 18,805 214,843 14,374 131,238 Other than family held ..................................farms: 2 1 3 - 13 42 - 4 acres: (D) (D) 3,357 - 7,729 9,604 - 16 : Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc. ........................farms: 7 3 8 - 7 14 6 1 acres: 202,510 174 7,125 - 1,820 456 1,675 (D) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. Table 46. Male Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Male producers : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 21,373 26,384 11,260,574 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 1,052 1,161 110,240 Adams ...........................................................: 198 226 143,302 Bannock .........................................................: 956 1,226 416,899 Bear Lake .......................................................: 341 420 207,713 Benewah .........................................................: 207 232 121,047 Bingham .........................................................: 1,037 1,304 872,859 Blaine ..........................................................: 189 235 255,412 Boise ...........................................................: 98 112 65,412 Bonner ..........................................................: 718 861 93,697 Bonneville ......................................................: 859 1,036 401,271 : Boundary ........................................................: 290 370 69,294 Butte ...........................................................: 135 168 97,822 Camas ...........................................................: 101 125 184,263 Canyon ..........................................................: 2,164 2,513 258,725 Caribou .........................................................: 378 526 413,332 Cassia ..........................................................: 534 699 651,103 Clark ...........................................................: 60 80 197,749 Clearwater ......................................................: 252 298 61,155 Custer ..........................................................: 216 255 107,554 Elmore ..........................................................: 264 346 280,228 : Franklin ........................................................: 713 947 273,490 Fremont .........................................................: 519 724 268,639 Gem .............................................................: 655 725 187,619 Gooding .........................................................: 479 633 211,398 Idaho ...........................................................: 664 804 536,823 Jefferson .......................................................: 649 844 256,431 Jerome ..........................................................: 439 552 180,019 Kootenai ........................................................: 846 945 102,219 Latah ...........................................................: 890 1,124 317,017 Lemhi ...........................................................: 265 328 130,592 : Lewis ...........................................................: 192 235 242,998 Lincoln .........................................................: 220 260 101,314 Madison .........................................................: 356 468 166,838 Minidoka ........................................................: 442 540 308,271 Nez Perce .......................................................: 385 508 338,738 Oneida ..........................................................: 422 557 293,962 Owyhee ..........................................................: 423 534 715,944 Payette .........................................................: 524 609 170,518 Power ...........................................................: 266 378 439,485 Shoshone ........................................................: 35 39 1,354 : Teton ...........................................................: 238 341 110,713 Twin Falls ......................................................: 1,109 1,419 457,008 Valley ..........................................................: 130 147 41,090 Washington ......................................................: 463 530 399,017 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 47. Female Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Female producers : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 15,634 16,949 6,186,588 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 865 923 66,335 Adams ...........................................................: 184 195 79,535 Bannock .........................................................: 744 812 282,222 Bear Lake .......................................................: 223 241 101,964 Benewah .........................................................: 144 159 40,917 Bingham .........................................................: 719 775 641,200 Blaine ..........................................................: 141 146 179,221 Boise ...........................................................: 79 92 45,581 Bonner ..........................................................: 630 706 74,045 Bonneville ......................................................: 604 671 210,404 : Boundary ........................................................: 236 245 43,367 Butte ...........................................................: 86 97 30,451 Camas ...........................................................: 78 83 148,710 Canyon ..........................................................: 1,649 1,747 123,069 Caribou .........................................................: 230 262 170,635 Cassia ..........................................................: 333 377 304,178 Clark ...........................................................: 40 47 135,038 Clearwater ......................................................: 201 201 48,125 Custer ..........................................................: 165 186 79,201 Elmore ..........................................................: 202 221 180,955 : Franklin ........................................................: 494 532 178,052 Fremont .........................................................: 333 381 144,774 Gem .............................................................: 551 577 130,032 Gooding .........................................................: 283 319 95,492 Idaho ...........................................................: 474 513 352,319 Jefferson .......................................................: 462 496 128,705 Jerome ..........................................................: 261 281 88,838 Kootenai ........................................................: 761 827 65,295 Latah ...........................................................: 693 749 159,078 Lemhi ...........................................................: 231 248 63,317 : Lewis ...........................................................: 133 153 131,632 Lincoln .........................................................: 137 140 61,718 Madison .........................................................: 201 211 73,710 Minidoka ........................................................: 265 277 125,592 Nez Perce .......................................................: 257 286 156,884 Oneida ..........................................................: 270 298 186,255 Owyhee ..........................................................: 334 372 222,448 Payette .........................................................: 385 401 72,881 Power ...........................................................: 183 195 270,814 Shoshone ........................................................: 36 42 1,258 : Teton ...........................................................: 144 168 44,525 Twin Falls ......................................................: 746 824 176,851 Valley ..........................................................: 106 116 36,802 Washington ......................................................: 341 357 234,163 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 48. Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish Origin Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Hispanic, Latino, or : Geographic area : Farms : Spanish producers : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 1,091 1,341 534,607 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 57 68 8,060 Adams ...........................................................: 12 12 3,418 Bannock .........................................................: 35 42 668 Bear Lake .......................................................: 12 17 5,124 Benewah .........................................................: 5 5 94 Bingham .........................................................: 53 68 7,302 Blaine ..........................................................: 11 11 50,935 Boise ...........................................................: 9 11 10,980 Bonner ..........................................................: 44 49 8,678 Bonneville ......................................................: 25 32 2,389 : Boundary ........................................................: 12 14 4,882 Butte ...........................................................: 9 12 2,640 Camas ...........................................................: 2 2 (D) Canyon ..........................................................: 174 193 18,634 Caribou .........................................................: 12 13 18,304 Cassia ..........................................................: 37 47 20,833 Clearwater ......................................................: 6 6 (D) Custer ..........................................................: 2 2 (D) Elmore ..........................................................: 28 38 92,420 Franklin ........................................................: 15 19 2,454 : Fremont .........................................................: 8 11 1,408 Gem .............................................................: 27 27 14,348 Gooding .........................................................: 57 73 24,396 Idaho ...........................................................: 15 15 2,962 Jefferson .......................................................: 22 22 19,417 Jerome ..........................................................: 49 60 8,556 Kootenai ........................................................: 32 36 1,070 Latah ...........................................................: 21 23 5,190 Lemhi ...........................................................: 9 10 3,586 Lincoln .........................................................: 19 31 6,058 : Madison .........................................................: 3 3 (D) Minidoka ........................................................: 63 92 60,906 Nez Perce .......................................................: 6 6 449 Oneida ..........................................................: 18 21 11,696 Owyhee ..........................................................: 35 43 60,278 Payette .........................................................: 19 30 5,872 Power ...........................................................: 8 8 9,511 Shoshone ........................................................: 1 2 (D) Teton ...........................................................: 2 2 (D) Twin Falls ......................................................: 84 130 19,966 : Valley ..........................................................: 5 5 109 Washington ......................................................: 28 30 3,236 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 49. American Indian or Alaska Native Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : American Indian or : Geographic area : Farms : Alaska Native producers 1/ : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 236 290 536,981 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 6 6 61 Adams ...........................................................: 8 16 894 Bannock .........................................................: 32 45 (D) Bear Lake .......................................................: 1 1 (D) Benewah .........................................................: 10 11 42,685 Bingham .........................................................: 22 26 (D) Bonner ..........................................................: 12 15 820 Bonneville ......................................................: 5 5 34 Boundary ........................................................: 3 3 17 Camas ...........................................................: 1 1 (D) : Canyon ..........................................................: 23 29 894 Cassia ..........................................................: 2 2 (D) Clearwater ......................................................: 2 2 (D) Custer ..........................................................: 3 3 (D) Elmore ..........................................................: 8 8 418 Franklin ........................................................: 6 6 1,230 Fremont .........................................................: 2 2 (D) Gem .............................................................: 4 4 68 Gooding .........................................................: 2 2 (D) Idaho ...........................................................: 7 9 7,185 : Jerome ..........................................................: 3 3 149 Kootenai ........................................................: 8 10 121 Latah ...........................................................: 5 7 356 Lemhi ...........................................................: 7 7 874 Lewis ...........................................................: 4 4 517 Lincoln .........................................................: 5 5 3,207 Madison .........................................................: 4 8 20 Nez Perce .......................................................: 7 9 24,840 Owyhee ..........................................................: 15 21 5,180 Payette .........................................................: 5 5 (D) : Power ...........................................................: 5 5 (D) Teton ...........................................................: 1 2 (D) Twin Falls ......................................................: 6 6 195 Washington ......................................................: 2 2 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ For any producer reporting race as American Indian or Alaska Native only. Table 50. Asian Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Asian producers 1/ : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 124 144 42,266 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 3 3 (D) Adams ...........................................................: 2 2 (D) Bannock .........................................................: 4 4 229 Bingham .........................................................: 5 5 (D) Boise ...........................................................: 2 2 (D) Bonneville ......................................................: 19 22 2,444 Boundary ........................................................: 2 2 (D) Butte ...........................................................: 2 2 (D) Canyon ..........................................................: 20 24 10,187 Caribou .........................................................: 1 1 (D) : Cassia ..........................................................: 3 3 (D) Clark ...........................................................: 1 3 (D) Elmore ..........................................................: 1 1 (D) Franklin ........................................................: 1 1 (D) Gem .............................................................: 6 6 137 Gooding .........................................................: 3 4 (D) Jerome ..........................................................: 1 1 (D) Kootenai ........................................................: 7 7 618 Latah ...........................................................: 13 19 2,489 Madison .........................................................: 1 1 (D) : Nez Perce .......................................................: 2 2 (D) Owyhee ..........................................................: 2 2 (D) Payette .........................................................: 7 11 (D) Power ...........................................................: 3 3 24 Twin Falls ......................................................: 6 6 276 Valley ..........................................................: 5 5 693 Washington ......................................................: 2 2 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ For any producer reporting race as Asian only. Table 51. Black or African American Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Black or African : Geographic area : Farms : American producers 1/ : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 17 19 6,449 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 5 6 36 Bear Lake .......................................................: 1 1 (D) Canyon ..........................................................: 4 5 22 Cassia ..........................................................: 1 1 (D) Fremont .........................................................: 1 1 (D) Gooding .........................................................: 1 1 (D) Oneida ..........................................................: 1 1 (D) Payette .........................................................: 2 2 (D) Washington ......................................................: 1 1 (D) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ For any producer reporting race as Black or African American only. Table 52. Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific : Geographic area : Farms : Islander producers 1/ : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 36 42 8,200 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 2 2 (D) Bannock .........................................................: 1 1 (D) Bingham .........................................................: 2 4 (D) Canyon ..........................................................: 4 4 189 Cassia ..........................................................: 1 1 (D) Franklin ........................................................: 2 2 (D) Gem .............................................................: 4 5 99 Idaho ...........................................................: 5 5 5,146 Jefferson .......................................................: 2 2 (D) Kootenai ........................................................: 1 1 (D) : Latah ...........................................................: 1 1 (D) Nez Perce .......................................................: 1 1 (D) Owyhee ..........................................................: 3 5 380 Shoshone ........................................................: 1 2 (D) Twin Falls ......................................................: 6 6 41 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ For any producer reporting race as Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander only. Table 53. White Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : White producers 1/ : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 22,660 42,509 11,126,600 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 1,135 2,044 112,450 Adams ...........................................................: 221 395 144,194 Bannock .........................................................: 976 1,975 412,336 Bear Lake .......................................................: 352 659 208,378 Benewah .........................................................: 235 375 84,746 Bingham .........................................................: 1,064 2,031 594,442 Blaine ..........................................................: 203 378 259,553 Boise ...........................................................: 107 201 66,275 Bonner ..........................................................: 795 1,539 97,278 Bonneville ......................................................: 890 1,669 404,992 : Boundary ........................................................: 315 603 73,136 Butte ...........................................................: 146 262 99,979 Camas ...........................................................: 110 206 186,359 Canyon ..........................................................: 2,281 4,163 271,514 Caribou .........................................................: 399 787 416,460 Cassia ..........................................................: 551 1,067 656,231 Clark ...........................................................: 67 124 206,127 Clearwater ......................................................: 271 491 65,682 Custer ..........................................................: 235 436 113,930 Elmore ..........................................................: 283 555 296,010 : Franklin ........................................................: 725 1,469 275,983 Fremont .........................................................: 543 1,100 275,203 Gem .............................................................: 711 1,274 199,286 Gooding .........................................................: 498 945 209,071 Idaho ...........................................................: 694 1,289 544,551 Jefferson .......................................................: 678 1,337 262,073 Jerome ..........................................................: 441 823 179,127 Kootenai ........................................................: 958 1,739 107,034 Latah ...........................................................: 984 1,820 324,303 Lemhi ...........................................................: 301 568 130,956 : Lewis ...........................................................: 219 384 249,015 Lincoln .........................................................: 229 394 104,847 Madison .........................................................: 346 660 164,051 Minidoka ........................................................: 453 815 290,301 Nez Perce .......................................................: 412 779 326,182 Oneida ..........................................................: 440 836 326,700 Owyhee ..........................................................: 450 860 728,850 Payette .........................................................: 565 978 171,232 Power ...........................................................: 276 564 443,958 Shoshone ........................................................: 43 75 1,590 : Teton ...........................................................: 268 507 112,072 Twin Falls ......................................................: 1,158 2,219 457,680 Valley ..........................................................: 142 255 45,321 Washington ......................................................: 490 859 427,142 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ For any producer reporting race as White only. Table 54. Producers Reporting More Than One Race: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Producers reporting more than : Geographic area : Farms : one race : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 293 329 73,672 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 20 23 302 Adams ...........................................................: 5 8 1,254 Bannock .........................................................: 13 13 5,704 Benewah .........................................................: 5 5 (D) Bingham .........................................................: 12 13 8,281 Blaine ..........................................................: 3 3 34 Boise ...........................................................: 1 1 (D) Bonner ..........................................................: 10 13 549 Bonneville ......................................................: 11 11 5,685 Boundary ........................................................: 5 7 267 : Butte ...........................................................: 1 1 (D) Camas ...........................................................: 1 1 (D) Canyon ..........................................................: 35 35 245 Cassia ..........................................................: 1 2 (D) Clearwater ......................................................: 6 6 670 Custer ..........................................................: 2 2 (D) Elmore ..........................................................: 3 3 15 Franklin ........................................................: 1 1 (D) Fremont .........................................................: 2 2 (D) Gem .............................................................: 13 13 1,928 : Idaho ...........................................................: 12 14 7,141 Jefferson .......................................................: 1 1 (D) Jerome ..........................................................: 6 6 55 Kootenai ........................................................: 15 15 1,508 Latah ...........................................................: 26 26 1,915 Lemhi ...........................................................: 1 1 (D) Lincoln .........................................................: 1 1 (D) Madison .........................................................: 10 10 2,862 Minidoka ........................................................: 2 2 (D) Nez Perce .......................................................: 3 3 20 : Oneida ..........................................................: 6 18 1,014 Owyhee ..........................................................: 12 18 956 Payette .........................................................: 13 14 3,153 Power ...........................................................: 1 1 (D) Shoshone ........................................................: 4 4 83 Twin Falls ......................................................: 6 6 1,459 Valley ..........................................................: 3 3 81 Washington ......................................................: 21 23 4,210 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 55. Producers with Military Service: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : Producers with : Geographic area : Farms : military service : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 3,449 3,662 1,257,195 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 196 210 8,767 Adams ...........................................................: 31 34 23,646 Bannock .........................................................: 163 190 29,462 Bear Lake .......................................................: 17 17 25,267 Benewah .........................................................: 42 42 8,147 Bingham .........................................................: 130 130 29,077 Blaine ..........................................................: 20 23 52,294 Boise ...........................................................: 21 23 4,808 Bonner ..........................................................: 194 198 18,051 Bonneville ......................................................: 111 122 16,263 : Boundary ........................................................: 52 52 15,719 Butte ...........................................................: 24 25 3,578 Camas ...........................................................: 13 13 86,570 Canyon ..........................................................: 375 395 21,900 Caribou .........................................................: 50 50 33,447 Cassia ..........................................................: 47 49 32,623 Clark ...........................................................: 7 7 14,607 Clearwater ......................................................: 50 50 3,380 Custer ..........................................................: 26 26 33,101 Elmore ..........................................................: 70 81 98,760 : Franklin ........................................................: 71 79 15,691 Fremont .........................................................: 77 92 10,937 Gem .............................................................: 136 141 5,619 Gooding .........................................................: 57 57 35,591 Idaho ...........................................................: 150 152 99,003 Jefferson .......................................................: 98 116 9,123 Jerome ..........................................................: 54 56 20,263 Kootenai ........................................................: 201 210 23,663 Latah ...........................................................: 203 225 29,877 Lemhi ...........................................................: 43 45 15,098 : Lewis ...........................................................: 25 28 5,094 Lincoln .........................................................: 23 23 9,764 Madison .........................................................: 21 21 9,198 Minidoka ........................................................: 42 43 5,101 Nez Perce .......................................................: 78 78 57,703 Oneida ..........................................................: 81 85 68,856 Owyhee ..........................................................: 70 79 61,429 Payette .........................................................: 83 84 10,529 Power ...........................................................: 25 25 55,653 Shoshone ........................................................: 7 7 191 : Teton ...........................................................: 34 34 27,840 Twin Falls ......................................................: 132 138 52,568 Valley ..........................................................: 26 33 4,844 Washington ......................................................: 73 74 64,093 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 56. Young Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : Young producers : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 2,826 3,859 1,468,931 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 83 112 4,568 Adams ...........................................................: 24 26 24,675 Bannock .........................................................: 141 208 9,756 Bear Lake .......................................................: 49 53 12,904 Benewah .........................................................: 20 25 8,494 Bingham .........................................................: 144 194 119,478 Blaine ..........................................................: 15 15 31,573 Boise ...........................................................: 5 5 375 Bonner ..........................................................: 90 125 20,806 Bonneville ......................................................: 111 147 30,863 : Boundary ........................................................: 34 47 12,505 Butte ...........................................................: 11 18 3,575 Camas ...........................................................: 22 28 44,088 Canyon ..........................................................: 293 411 56,434 Caribou .........................................................: 66 88 49,763 Cassia ..........................................................: 98 117 101,962 Clark ...........................................................: 6 11 4,234 Clearwater ......................................................: 17 17 9,989 Custer ..........................................................: 30 40 10,982 Elmore ..........................................................: 57 74 20,943 : Franklin ........................................................: 98 149 42,046 Fremont .........................................................: 85 103 41,510 Gem .............................................................: 62 75 16,141 Gooding .........................................................: 84 132 24,433 Idaho ...........................................................: 107 142 99,620 Jefferson .......................................................: 119 154 46,999 Jerome ..........................................................: 56 86 24,814 Kootenai ........................................................: 71 85 3,764 Latah ...........................................................: 75 107 27,054 Lemhi ...........................................................: 50 62 14,975 : Lewis ...........................................................: 17 30 31,467 Lincoln .........................................................: 32 39 14,093 Madison .........................................................: 53 64 37,759 Minidoka ........................................................: 50 64 134,303 Nez Perce .......................................................: 41 52 14,955 Oneida ..........................................................: 41 61 41,200 Owyhee ..........................................................: 73 119 59,004 Payette .........................................................: 78 109 21,535 Power ...........................................................: 63 96 89,150 Shoshone ........................................................: 4 4 16 : Teton ...........................................................: 32 45 13,054 Twin Falls ......................................................: 150 219 29,315 Valley ..........................................................: 11 16 10,014 Washington ......................................................: 58 85 53,743 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table 57. New and Beginning Producers: 2022 [Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Geographic area : Farms : New and beginning producers : Land in farms (acres) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : : Idaho ...........................................................: 8,702 14,798 2,736,291 : Counties : : Ada .............................................................: 447 753 29,134 Adams ...........................................................: 84 142 36,598 Bannock .........................................................: 488 849 194,945 Bear Lake .......................................................: 99 167 26,225 Benewah .........................................................: 110 173 28,148 Bingham .........................................................: 384 645 123,281 Blaine ..........................................................: 68 100 77,625 Boise ...........................................................: 45 72 3,991 Bonner ..........................................................: 305 534 35,330 Bonneville ......................................................: 360 643 91,217 : Boundary ........................................................: 121 209 24,564 Butte ...........................................................: 37 55 13,126 Camas ...........................................................: 49 73 76,120 Canyon ..........................................................: 973 1,684 51,836 Caribou .........................................................: 146 246 89,771 Cassia ..........................................................: 151 257 116,514 Clark ...........................................................: 21 31 21,088 Clearwater ......................................................: 89 164 19,472 Custer ..........................................................: 67 125 41,260 Elmore ..........................................................: 115 199 31,873 : Franklin ........................................................: 331 603 111,112 Fremont .........................................................: 219 383 73,406 Gem .............................................................: 308 527 27,526 Gooding .........................................................: 197 313 51,699 Idaho ...........................................................: 254 421 139,752 Jefferson .......................................................: 284 482 43,330 Jerome ..........................................................: 149 221 34,562 Kootenai ........................................................: 394 701 23,900 Latah ...........................................................: 361 631 112,107 Lemhi ...........................................................: 104 171 38,150 : Lewis ...........................................................: 73 124 78,570 Lincoln .........................................................: 72 112 23,808 Madison .........................................................: 112 187 48,054 Minidoka ........................................................: 127 219 121,374 Nez Perce .......................................................: 147 229 75,919 Oneida ..........................................................: 168 293 113,359 Owyhee ..........................................................: 172 296 82,852 Payette .........................................................: 207 319 53,291 Power ...........................................................: 103 177 111,009 Shoshone ........................................................: 22 35 571 : Teton ...........................................................: 95 151 28,005 Twin Falls ......................................................: 413 709 104,524 Valley ..........................................................: 56 87 15,697 Washington ......................................................: 175 286 91,596 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Appendix A. Census of Agriculture Methodology The purpose of a census is to enumerate all objects with a defined characteristic. For the census of agriculture, that goal is to account for "any place from which $1,000 or more of agricultural products were produced and sold, or normally would have been sold, during the census year." To do this, NASS creates a Census Mail List (CML) of agricultural operations that potentially meet the farm definition, collects agricultural information from those operations, reviews the data, corrects or completes the requested information, and combines the data to provide information on the characteristics of farm operations and farm producers at the national, State, and county levels. In this appendix, these census processes are described. THE CENSUS POPULATION The Census Mail List The National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) maintains a list of farmers and ranchers from which the CML is compiled. The goal is to build as complete a list as possible of agricultural places that meet the farm definition. The CML compilation begins with the list used to define sampling populations for NASS surveys conducted for the agricultural estimates program. Each record on the list includes name, address, telephone number, and email plus additional information that is used to efficiently administer the census of agriculture and agricultural estimates programs. NASS builds and improves the list on an ongoing basis by obtaining outside source lists. Sources include State and federal government lists, producer association lists, seed grower lists, pesticide applicator lists, veterinarian lists, marketing association lists, and a variety of other agriculture-related lists. NASS also obtains special commodity lists to address specific list deficiencies. These outside source lists are matched to the NASS list using record linkage programs. Most names on newly acquired sources are already on the NASS list. Records not on the NASS list are treated as potential farms until NASS can confirm their existence as a qualifying farm. Staff in NASS regional and field offices routinely contact these potential farms to determine whether they meet the farm definition. For the 2022 Census of Agriculture, NASS made a concerted effort to work with community-based organizations not only to improve list coverage for minorities but also to increase census awareness and participation. List building activities for developing the 2022 CML started in 2019 by updating list information from respondents to the 2017 Census of Agriculture. Between 2017 and 2022, NASS conducted a series of National Agricultural Classification Surveys (NACS) on over 2.1 million records, which included nonrespondents from the 2017 census and newly added records from outside list sources. The NACS report forms collected information that was used to determine whether an operation met the farm definition. If the definition was met, the operation was added to the NASS list and subsequently to the CML. Addressees that were nonrespondents to a NACS were also added to the CML and identified with a special status code. Measures were taken to improve name and address quality. Additional record linkage programs were run to detect and remove duplicate records both within each State and across States. List addresses were processed through software programs that utilize the United States Postal Service's National Change of Address System and the Locatable Address Conversion System to improve mail delivery. Records on the list with missing or invalid phone numbers were matched against a nationally available telephone database to obtain as many phone numbers as possible. To reduce costs, operations with characteristics that indicated they were unlikely to be farms, according to the farm definition, were removed from the list. The official CML for the 2022 Census of Agriculture was established on September 3, 2022. The list contained 2,879,343 records. Of these, 2,079,333 records were thought to meet the NASS farm definition and 800,010 were potential farm records, which included NACS nonrespondents, other records added to the CML by the NASS regional field offices after the record linkage process, and late adds to the CML that were not included in any previous NACS or State screening survey. Not on the Mail List (NML) Extensive efforts are directed toward developing a CML that includes all farms in the U.S. However, some farms are not on the list, and some agricultural operations on the list are not farms. NASS uses its June Area Survey (JAS) to quantify the number and types of farms not on the CML. The records in the JAS that are not on the CML are said to be in the Not-on-the- Mail List (NML) domain. If a JAS record in the NML domain is determined to be a farm during the census, it is an NML farm. The NML farms are used to measure coverage associated with the grown crops, farm numbers, and inventories of cattle. Sampled segments in the JAS are personally enumerated. Each operation identified within a segment boundary is known as a tract. The 2022 JAS sample was increased to improve the farm counts for operations that produced specialty commodities or had socially disadvantaged or minority producers. The total JAS sample consisted of 14,015 segments of which 4,933 were additional ACES segments. This set of additional segments is referred to as the Agricultural Coverage Evaluation Survey (ACES) segments. The ACES segments were selected using a multivariate sampling design that targeted specific items at the U.S. level. The 2022 JAS consisted of sample segments from all States, with the exception of Alaska where NASS does not maintain an area frame. During the JAS/ACES enumeration process, each tract is identified as either agricultural or non-agricultural. Each JAS/ACES agricultural tract is identified as a farm or non-farm in June based on the farm definition of $1,000 of sales or potential sales of agricultural products. Non-agricultural tracts are further classified into categories: with farm potential, with unknown farm potential, or with no farm potential. The names and addresses collected in the 2022 JAS/ACES were matched to the CML. Those from the 2022 JAS/ACES that did not match were determined to be in the NML domain and sent a yellow census report form so that they could be differentiated from the green report form sent to those addressees on the CML. Instructions on the census report form directed any respondent who received duplicate forms to complete the CML form and to mail all duplicate forms back together. Those who returned a CML and an NML form had been misclassified as NML and were removed from the NML domain. The initial NML mailout consisted of 41,273 records. A total of 40,775 NML records were analyzed, of which 1,913 records were confirmed to be NML and in-scope. The farm/nonfarm status of each NML domain operation was determined based on the reported data in the census form. An operation in the NML domain that was determined to be a farm is referred to as an NML farm. Characteristics of NML farms and their producers provided a measure of the undercoverage of farms present in the CML. The percentage of farms not represented on the CML varied by State. In general, NML farms tended to be small in acreage, production, and sales of agricultural products. Farm operations were missing from the CML for various reasons, including the possibility that the operation started after development of the CML, the operation was so small that it did not appear in any agriculture-related source list, or the operation was misclassified as a nonfarm prior to census mailout. The CML was used with the NML in a capture- recapture framework to represent all farming operations across all States in the JAS sample. DATA COLLECTION OUTREACH AND PROMOTIONAL EFFORTS NASS planned and executed a multi-phase strategic communications campaign for the 2022 Census of Agriculture, to increase the level of awareness and response among all U.S. agricultural producers. * Phase 1 ran from April 2021 - June 2022. It raised awareness about the census and list building, encouraged producers to sign up in response to NASS mailings and at community, association, and other stakeholder meetings where NASS partners reached out. * Phase 2 ran from July 2022 - October 2022. It notified farm producers and agricultural organizations that the census would be mailed in November and encouraged communications regarding the census. * Phase 3 ran from November 2022 - May 2023. It focused on census data collection with messaging urging response to remind producers that it was not too late to respond. * Phase 4 ran from August 2023 - February 2024. It thanked producers for their participation and NASS partners for their support and informed everyone of the February 2024 data release plan. The communications campaign focused on these primary areas: partnership building, local-level outreach, public relations, media relations, paid media, social media and some paid advertising. Some external support was provided by a private communications agency (i.e. primarily assisted with design and paid advertising). The unifying force behind the 2022 communications campaign was the theme "Your Voice. Your Future. Your Opportunity." This was accompanied by supporting messages and artwork that created a consistent look and feel for all census communications. All messages and materials served the purpose of inspiring action: Sign Up to Be Counted - Show the Value of Your Work - Grow Your Farm Future - Shape Farm Policy/Programs - Respond to the Census of Agriculture - Be counted - The Census of Agriculture is Your Voice, Your Future, Your Opportunity. Partnership and Local-Level Outreach At the national level, NASS officials met with leaders from dozens of agricultural organizations, State Departments of Agriculture, and other USDA agencies to successfully secure their support in promoting the census among their constituencies. Stakeholders partnered with NASS to promote the 2022 Census of Agriculture through publications (e.g. newsletters), special mailings, speeches, social media, websites, and other communications. In addition, through grassroots-level outreach and efforts, NASS partnered with a number of community-based organizations to reach minority and limited- resource farmers and ranchers. National-level outreach was encouraged and mirrored at the regional, State, and local levels. Among the highlights of these partnership efforts was the production of multiple television and radio public service announcements featuring the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, State secretaries, directors, and commissioners of agriculture and leaders from community-based organizations. Coverage of American Indian and Alaska Native Farm Producers To maximize coverage of American Indian and Alaska Native agricultural producers, special procedures were followed in the census. A concerted effort was made to get individual reports from every American Indian and Alaska Native farm or ranch producer in the country. If this was not possible within some reservations, a single reservation-level census report was obtained from knowledgeable reservation officials. These reports covered agricultural activity on the entire reservation. NASS staff reviewed these data and removed duplication with any data reported by American Indian or Alaska Native producers who responded on an individual census report form. Additionally, NASS obtained, from knowledgeable reservation officials, the count of American Indian and Alaska Native producers (on reservations) who were not counted through individual census report forms, but whose agricultural activity was included in the reservation-level report form. Table D, American Indian and Alaska Native Producers: 2022 provides the number of producers (1) reported as American Indian or Alaska Native in the race category, either as a single race or in combination with other races, on the individual census report forms (for up to four per farm) and (2) identified as American Indian or Alaska Native producers farming on reservations by reservation officials. The count from the individual report forms is summarized in the "Individually reported" column. It includes up to four producers on or off reservations. The "Other" column provides counts of producers on reservations as reported by a reservation or tribal official. The "Total" column is simply a sum of the "Individually reported" and the "Other" columns. Tables in other parts of the publication count the reservation-level reports as single farms. Public Relations In the public relations arena, NASS worked with internal and external, national, regional, and local stakeholders to equip them with communications tools and resources to deliver the census communications message to their audiences. NASS utilized its Intranet, the Partner Tools section on the census webpage, and a regularly scheduled, newsletter-type email update to deliver materials to staff across its 12 regions, other USDA agencies and external stakeholders. The materials included but were not limited to: customizable news releases, public service announcement scripts, and a PowerPoint template; Secretary of Agriculture video public service announcements, and drop-in advertisements; informational, instructional, and testimonial videos; website buttons and banners; brochures in multiple languages; social media posts; flyers; posters; FAQ sheets, talking points, and more. In addition, at the national level, NASS issued six news releases during data collection (three more were produced before data collection to inform and prepare producers) citing department and agency spokespeople, published half a dozen timely and relevant pieces to the USDA blog highlighting the census, and conducted three social media campaigns. These public relations efforts at the national and local-levels helped ensure that NASS' message about the census was continually in the media, including print and online publications, a variety of social media, radio, and some television programs. Media outlets included both those specializing in agriculture and more general outlets. Paid Media With a very limited budget, NASS was able to apply a small portion of funds toward paid advertising. For the 2022 Census of Agriculture, NASS strategically advertised in regional print publications, online, and with national agriculture news services (i.e., TV, radio) to bolster reach both in general and within geographically specific, previously under-represented populations and lower response areas. DATA COLLECTION Method of Enumeration Data collection was accomplished primarily by mail, Computer-Assisted Self Interview (CASI) on the Internet, and personal enumeration for special classes of records in the census operations. Personal enumeration (interviewing) involved the use of both Computer-Assisted Telephone Interview (CATI) and Computer-Assisted Personal Interview (CAPI) data collection instruments. Enumerators at the five NASS Data Collection Centers conducted CATI data collection. In addition, enumerators under contract with NASS through the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture (NASDA) conducted phone and personal interviews with respondents. For the 2022 Census of Agriculture, NASS implemented a pre-notification strategy to increase awareness, improve overall responses, and encourage respondents to report early to avoid continued correspondence. All records with an e-mail address received an e-mail message marketing the improved web form and announcing the census mail packets were coming. Report Forms Four versions of report forms were used for the 2022 Census of Agriculture: * General form (22 - A100) * Hawaii form (22 - A101) * American Indian form (22 - A300) * Farm Status form (22 - A400) The general form facilitated reporting crops and livestock most commonly grown and raised in the U.S. The short form expedited reporting specific crops or livestock for pre-identified farms and ranches in the U.S. The Hawaii form targeted crops and livestock specifically grown or raised on farms and ranches in Hawaii. The American Indian form focused on crops and livestock for farms and ranches on reservations in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. All report forms allowed respondents to write in specific commodities that were not prelisted on their report form. Report Form Mailings Census data collection began on November 22, 2022. Nearly all producers on the CML received a letter inviting them to report online. They received a unique survey code and instructions for completing their census online. The letter encouraged producers to report online early to avoid receiving mail and phone follow-up. Approximately 3 million mail packets were mailed in December 2022. Each packet contained a cover letter, instruction sheet, a labeled report form, and a return envelope. The Census Bureau's National Processing Center (NPC) in Jeffersonville, IN was contracted to perform mail packet preparation, initial mailout, and two follow-up mailings to nonrespondents. The initial mailout was followed by a thank-you reminder correspondence in January 2023. This pressure-sealed envelope reminded respondents of the approaching deadline and that they could report online. First follow-up mail packets were mailed in mid-February 2023 to approximately 1.5 million nonrespondents. Second follow-up mail packets were mailed in mid-March 2023 to approximately 1 million nonrespondents. A final mailing went to approximately 800,000 non- respondents. This mailing included a drastically reduced four-page questionnaire designed to primarily determine if the operation was a farm or not in business. Nonresponse Follow-up Operating concurrently with NPC's mail data collection efforts, NASS Data Collection Centers targeted selected groups of census nonrespondents for telephone enumeration. NASS regional field offices targeted selected groups of census nonrespondents for in-person enumeration. These efforts were referred to as: * Must Case Follow-up * American Indian Producer Follow-up * National Nonresponse Follow-up * Not on Mail List (NML) Follow-up Must Case Follow-up. Must cases are known large or unique operations, the absence of which could have significantly affected the accuracy of census results. For the 2022 Census of Agriculture, 125,697 records were categorized as Must cases. Each active Must operation was accounted for by mail receipt, phone interview, or personal enumeration; if an operation was no longer in business, its nonfarm status was documented. Call centers conducted CATI calling of nonrespondent Must cases from March 2023 through May 2023, after the initial and first follow-up mailings. Following the CATI calling, the remaining nonresponse Must cases were assigned to regional field offices for personal enumeration. Because of the potential importance of Must cases, they were all accounted for and therefore not eligible for nonresponse weighting adjustment. American Indian Producer Follow-up. The American Indian report form (22-A300) was mailed to all operations in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah thought to have an American Indian producer. It was included in the initial mailout, but due to poor mail response, a personal enumeration data collection strategy was utilized with no additional mail follow-up. A concerted effort was made to get individual reports from every American Indian farm producer in the country. If this was not possible within a reservation, a single reservation- level census report was obtained from knowledgeable reservation officials. These reports covered agricultural activity on the entire reservation. NASS staff reviewed these data and removed any duplicate data reported by American Indian producers from that reservation who responded on an individual census report form. Additionally, NASS obtained, from knowledgeable reservation officials, the count of American Indian farm producers (on the reservations) who were not counted through individual census report forms, but whose agricultural activity was included in the reservation-level report form. National Nonresponse Follow-up (Excludes Must Records). In April 2023, a group of records that were not part of other nonresponse data collection efforts were identified for additional phone contacts. In total, 82,237 records with specified demographics and/or eligibility for Census Special Studies (follow-ons) were made available for nonresponse Computer-Assisted Telephone Interviews (CATI). Not-on-the-Mail List (NML) Follow-up. To account for farming operations not on the CML, NASS used its 2022 JAS sample from the NASS area frame, augmented with the ACES segments. Because the NASS area frame covers all land in the U.S. with the exception of Alaska, it includes all farms. As previously described, NASS conducted a record linkage operation between the CML records and the records from the 2022 JAS/ACES. Those 2022 JAS records that did not match records on the CML were designated as "Not-on-the-Mail List" (NML) records. These records were mailed a yellow census form so that it could be differentiated from the green forms mailed to CML records. The NML records were mailed at the same time as the census mailing and received the same follow-up procedures as the census mailing through the first follow-up in mid- February 2023. Beginning in March 2023, CATI was used for nonresponse follow- up for NML nonrespondents. REPORT FORM PROCESSING Data Capture The Census Bureau's National Processing Center (NPC) in Jeffersonville, IN was contracted to process returned mail packets. NASS staff on site at the NPC provided technical guidance and monitored NPC processing activities. All report forms returned to the NPC were immediately checked in, using bar codes printed on the mailing label, and removed from follow-up report form mailings. All forms with any data were scanned and an image was made of each page of a report form. Optical Mark Recognition (OMR) was used to capture categorical responses and to identify the other answer zones in which some type of mark was present. Data entry operators keyed data from the scanned images using OMR results that highlighted the areas of the report forms with respondent entries. The keyer evaluated the contents and captured pertinent responses. Ten percent of the captured data were keyed a second time for quality control. If differences existed between the first keyed value and the second, an adjudicator handled resolution. The decision of the adjudicator was used to grade the performance of the keyers, who were required to maintain a certain accuracy level. The images and the captured data were transferred to NASS's centralized network and became available to NASS analysts on a flow basis. The images were available for use in all stages of review. Editing Data Captured data were processed through a computer formatting program that verified that records were valid - that the record ID number was on the list of census records, that the reported counties of operation and production were valid, and other related criteria. Rejected records were referred to analysts for correction. Accepted records were sent to a complex computer batch edit process. Each execution of the computer edit in batch mode consisted of records from only one State and flowed as the data were received from NPC, the NASS Computer-Assisted Self Interview (CASI), or the Computer-Assisted Telephone Interview (CATI) applications. The computer edit determined whether a reporting operation met the qualifying criteria to be counted as a farm (in-scope). The edit examined each in-scope record for reasonableness and completeness and determined whether to accept the recorded value for each data item or take corrective action. Such corrective actions included removing erroneously reported values, replacing an unreasonable value with one consistent with other reported data, or providing a value for an item omitted by the respondent. To the extent possible, the computer edit determined a replacement value. Strategies for determining replacement values are discussed in the next section. Operations failing to meet the qualifying criteria for being classified as a farm were categorized as out-of- scope for the census. Records that NASS had reason to believe might have been erroneously classified as out-of-scope (indications of recent and/or significant agricultural activity reported on NASS surveys, for example) were referred to analysts for verification. The edit systematically checked reported data section-by-section with the overall objective of achieving an internally consistent and complete report. NASS subject-matter experts had previously defined the criteria for acceptable data. Problems that could not be resolved within the edit were referred to an analyst for intervention. Prior to the census mail-out, NASS established a group of analysts in a Census Editing Unit in the National Operations Center in St. Louis, MO who examined the scanned images, consulted additional sources of information, and determined an appropriate action. Regional field office analysts also participated using an interactive version of the edit program to submit corrected data and immediately re-edit the record to ensure a satisfactory solution. Farm Status Form Editing From the CML, 883,732 records were selected to receive a Farm Status form as a final follow-up form; this form was derived from the full census report form by selecting a subset of the questions on the full form. Since these questions were also asked on the general form, the edit was able to treat the Farm Status form responses as though they were incomplete general forms, as described in the previous paragraphs. Imputing Data The edit determined the best value to impute for reported responses that were deemed unreasonable and for required responses that were absent. If an item could not be calculated directly from other current responses, the edit determined whether acreage, production, or inventory items had been reported for that farm on a recent NASS crop or livestock survey. For producers who had not changed in five years, demographics such as race and gender were taken from the previous census. Administrative data from the Farm Service Agency were used for a few items, such as Conservation Reserve Program acreage. When deterministic edit logic and previously-reported data sources were unable to provide a current value, data from a reporting farm of similar type, size, and location were considered. In cases where automated imputation was unable to provide a consistent report, the record was referred to an analyst for resolution. Separate system processes were established to efficiently provide data from a similar farm to the edit when donor imputation was required. The farm characteristics used to define similarity between a recipient record and its donor record were determined dynamically by the edit logic. Euclidean distance was used for similarity computations, with each contributing similarity characteristic scaled appropriately. The most similar farm based on this criterion (the "nearest neighbor") was identified and returned to the edit for use as a donor. The calculated distance between the centroids of the principal counties of production of the donor and recipient was always included as one of the measures of similarity. To provide donors to the automated edit, a pool of successfully edited records was maintained for each section of the report form. These donor pools began with 2017 census data, reconfigured to emulate 2022 data and then edited using 2022 logic. Data from the 2020 Census Content Test were similarly remapped and edited before being added to the original donor pools. As 2022 records were successfully processed, they were added to the donor pools, which maintained the most recent data for each farm. Donor pools were updated approximately every other week, as determined by edit processing schedules. After several updates, all initial data records were dropped, leaving only 2022 records in the donor pools. After each update, donor pool records were grouped into strata containing farms in the same State of similar type and size, using a data-driven algorithm to define strata. Certain American Indian farms were treated as a separate group, effectively having their own donor pool. In response to each donor request issued by the edit, a dedicated system process would search the appropriate stratum and respond with the most similar donor, while giving preference to more recent donors. In relatively rare instances where it was unable to provide a donor, the donor selection process issued an appropriate failure message to the edit. Imputation failures occurred for several different reasons. The requirement that an imputed value be positive could have ruled out all available donors, as could have the necessity for the donor record to satisfy a particular constraint - say, that the donor record has cattle, but no milk cows. In general, an imputation failure occurred if there were no satisfactory donors in the same profile as the report being edited. Records with imputation failures were either held until more records were available in the donor pool or referred to an analyst. In addition, when such a failure occurred in finding a donor for expenditure data, donor pool averages were provided in lieu of an individual donor, wherever possible. This "failover" utility was first introduced for the 2012 census imputation process, and significantly reduced the number of imputation failures among the expenditure and labor variables. During the early stages of editing, records requiring imputation for production (and hence yields) of field crops or hay, land values, or certain expenditure variables, were set aside or "parked." These records were edited when the donor pools contained only 2022 records, ensuring that 2022 data were used in the imputations for the variables. After receiving a donor's data, the edit substituted the values into the edited record. In many cases, the donor record's data value was scaled using another data field specified in the edit logic. In such cases, the size of the auxiliary field's value in the edited record, relative to its value in the donor record, was used to appropriately scale the donor record's value for the field to be imputed. The imputed data were then validated by the same edit logic to which reported data were subject. Since imputation was conducted independently for each occurrence, reports requiring multiple imputations may have drawn from multiple donors. As was done for the 2017 Census, for records reporting three or more persons as producers, a different imputation process was used for certain items (specifically the items in question 3) in the Personal Characteristics Section. Records with one or two persons reported as producers had these data edited and imputed using the decision logic table edit and donor pool imputation process. Records with three or more persons reported as producers, and for which it was determined that these data were inconsistent or missing, had these data imputed using a fully conditional specification method. During the edit for records reporting three or more producers, the items needing imputation were marked, and the record was flagged. At the end of the data collection period, the data for these records (both the items needing to be imputed and the other variables needed by the model) were pulled and run through the imputation program. The resulting imputed values were loaded back to the records, and the records were made available for review. Data Analysis The complex edit ensured the full internal consistency of the record. Successfully completing the edit did not provide insight as to whether the report was reasonable compared to other reports in the county. Analysts were provided an additional set of tools, in the form of listings and graphs, to review record-level data across farms. These examinations revealed extreme outliers, large and small, or unique data distribution patterns that were possibly a result of reporting, recording, or handling errors. Potential problems were investigated and, when necessary, corrections were made, and the record interactively edited again. When NASS summarizes data from the census of agriculture, each individual report is typically assigned to a single "principal" county. The principal county is the county in which the majority of an operation's agricultural products are produced, as reported by the producer. For large operations that have significant production in multiple counties, their reports may be broken up into multiple source counties to more accurately summarize the data. Similarly, for large farms operating in more than one State, separate report forms are completed by State in order to assign the proper portion of the farm's total agricultural production to each State in which the farm operates. ACCOUNTING FOR UNDERCOVERAGE, NONRESPONSE, AND MISCLASSIFICATION Although much effort has been expended making the CML as complete and accurate as possible, it does not include all U.S. farm operations, resulting in list undercoverage. Additionally, some farm operations on the CML did not respond to the census, despite numerous contact attempts. Finally, although each operation was classified as a farm or a nonfarm based on their census responses, some were misclassified; that is, some nonfarms were classified as farms and some farms were classified as nonfarms. NASS's goal is to produce agricultural census totals for publication at the county level that are fully adjusted for these factors: list undercoverage, nonresponse, and misclassification. In 2017, NASS used a series of models based on a subset of the responding census and all the JAS records in a capture-recapture framework to separately adjust for undercoverage, nonresponse, and misclassification. For the 2022 Census of Agriculture, the capture-recapture methodology was extended to model the probability of capture with a single model, thereby allowing the utilization of all census responses and JAS records in the adjustments. To implement capture-recapture methods, two independent samples are required. The 2022 Census of Agriculture (based on the CML) and the 2022 JAS (based on the area frame) were those two samples. Historically, NASS has been careful to maintain the independence of the CML and the area frame. Thus, the Census of Agriculture and the JAS were assumed to be independent after accounting for heterogeneity in the capture probabilities based on characteristics of records. For a farm to be identified as a farm, and thus captured by the census, it must be on the CML, respond to the census report form, and be classified as a farm on the form. Thus, the capture probability pC is of interest: pC = p(CML, Responded, Farm on Census|Farm) Two types of classification error can occur. First, a farm can be misclassified as a nonfarm. This type of misclassification is accounted for in determining the probability of capture pC. The second type of classification error results when a response to the census is classified as a farm operation when it does not meet the definition of a farm. That is, some farms on the CML may be misclassified from their census report response and may be nonfarms. To account for the misclassification of nonfarms as farms, the probability of a farm on the census being classified correctly must be estimated; that is, pCCFC = p(Farm | Farm on Census) where CCFC represents Correct Census Farm Classification. To adjust for undercoverage, nonresponse, and misclassification, each CML record classified as a farm based on its response to the census report form was given a weight of the ratio of the estimated probability of correct classification of a farm on the census and the estimated probability of capture where the hat symbol (^) denotes an estimate). To estimate the number of farms with a given set of characteristics, the weights of CML records responding as farms on the census and having that set of characteristics were summed. This estimator is referred to as the capture-recapture estimator (CR): where F is the set of all CML records classified as farms based on their responses to the census report form. To estimate these probabilities , the records in the 2022 JAS sample were matched to the 2022 CML using probabilistic record linkage allowing the records only on the CML, JAS, and on both the CML and JAS to be identified. All CML records and JAS tracts were used to estimate the capture- recapture probabilities jointly. Resolving Farm Status The farm status based on census responses to either the CML or NML census data collection and the response on the JAS agreed in most cases; these records are referred to as having resolved farm status. However, in other cases, a record was identified as a farm (nonfarm) on the JAS and as a nonfarm (farm) on the CML or the NML. Such records are said to have conflicting or unresolved farm status. An operation identified as a farm is referred to as in-scope; an operation identified as a nonfarm is referred to as out-of-scope. From the set of matched records, two groups with conflicting farm status were identified: 1) in-scope JAS records that were out-of-scope on the census and 2) census in-scope and JAS out-of-scope records. The records with conflicting farm status were sent to NASS regional field offices for review. In each case, efforts were made to determine whether (1) the status had changed between June and December when the census was conducted, (2) the JAS farm status was correct, (3) the census farm status was correct, (4) the records were incorrectly matched, or (5) the farm status could not be resolved. The probability that an operation is a farm was estimated for census and JAS by using a conditional logistic model. Only those records identified as a farm based on either their JAS response or their Census response were used to develop the model for estimating the probability a record is associated with a farm. Operations with matching farm status were considered as certain if the farm status agreed between the JAS and the CML. If the status between the JAS and CML was conflicting, then the operation was treated as uncertain during the modeling stages. Characteristics of the operations were considered as potential covariates in the model. Variable selection was conducted using a stepwise algorithm to maximize the conditional likelihood. The probability of being a farm is estimated for each record classified as a farm based on their JAS or census response. The estimated probability is used as a weight in all subsequent modeling. Capture Probabilities Recall that, for a farm to be identified as a farm, and thus captured, by the census, it must be on the CML, respond to either the census or JAS report form and, based on that response, be classified as a farm. Therefore, the probability of capture pC may be written as pC = p(CML, Responded, Farm on Census|Farm) = p(CML|Farm)p(Responded|CML, Farm)p(Farm on Census|CML, Responded, Farm) Terms in the probability of capturing a farm depend on characteristics of the farm. These terms, as well as the corresponding terms associated with a farm being captured by the JAS, were jointly estimated from a single model. Using all Census and JAS data, model variables were selected by applying a stepwise variable selection algorithm and expert opinion. Estimation was based on a conditional weighted likelihood. The events of a farm being included in the CML, the JAS or both were included in the likelihood. The event of a farm not being included in either the JAS or the CML was excluded from the likelihood but was accounted for through the model's capture-recapture properties. Although the probability of capture is estimated for both CML and JAS records, only CML records with a census response are given a census weight; records with only a JAS response are not given a census weight or used further to produce census estimates. Because Alaska is not included in the JAS and thus has no area frame, the Alaskan agricultural operations were not included in the capture-recapture process. No adjustments were made for undercoverage or misclassification. To account for nonresponse, the CML records were divided into three groups: (1) the Must records, (2) the Criteria Records, and (3) the remaining CML records. The must records received a weight of one, thereby receiving no adjustment for nonresponse. The probability of response for each of the other two groups was the proportion of responders within the group. Each record within the group was then given a weight equal to the reciprocal of the probability of response. Misclassification An operation is misclassified if: (1) it meets the definition of a farm but is classified as a nonfarm on the census or (2) it does not meet the definition of a farm but is classified as a farm on the census. The first type of misclassification is accounted for when modeling the probability of capture. An adjustment is still needed for the misclassification of nonfarms as farms. As with farm status and capture, the probability of this misclassification depends on an operation's characteristics. Thus, a conditional logistic model was developed. Given that a farm on the CML was classified as a farm in the census, the probability of its being a farm was modeled based on its characteristics. CALIBRATION Each operation identified as being in-scope on the CML was given a weight equal to the probability of misclassifying a nonfarm as a farm on the census divided by the probability of capture. This weight accounted for undercoverage, nonresponse, and both types of misclassification. The record weighting processes were initially applied at the State level to produce adjusted estimates of farm numbers, land in farms, and for 64 different categories of characteristics of the farm operation or the farm producer -- value of agricultural sales (10); age (2); female; race (3); Hispanic origin; 4 sales categories for each of 10 major commodities (40); and farm type groups (7). The State-level number of farms and land in farms were two additional adjusted estimates, resulting in 66 categories. To reduce the intercensal variation at the State level, the State targets were smoothed by averaging the 2022 estimates from capture-recapture and the published 2017 State estimates. These State estimates were general purpose in that they did not provide any control over expected levels of commodity production of the individual farm operation. As a result of this limitation, the procedures could have over- adjusted or under-adjusted for commodity production. To address this, a second set of variables, known as commodity targets, was added to the calibration algorithm. These targets were commodity totals from administrative sources or from NASS surveys of nonfarm populations (e.g., USDA Farm Service Agency program data, Agricultural Marketing Service market orders, livestock slaughter data, cotton ginning data). The introduction of these commodity coverage targets strengthened the overall adjustment procedure by ensuring that major commodity totals remained within reasonable bounds of established benchmarks. Each State was calibrated separately. The calibration algorithm addressed commodity coverage. The algorithm was controlled by the 65 State farm operation coverage targets and the State commodity coverage targets. Because calibration targets are estimates subject to uncertainty, NASS allowed some tolerance in the determination of the adjusted weights. Rather than forcing the total for each calibration variable computed using the adjusted weights to equal a specific amount, NASS allowed the estimated total to fall within a tolerance range. To ensure that all subdomains for which NASS publishes summed to their grand total, integer weights were produced by a discrete calibration algorithm. This eliminated the need for rounding individual cell values and ensured that marginal totals always added correctly to the grand total. If a weight was initially not in the interval [1,6], it was trimmed so that it was in that interval. That is, adjusted weights less than 1 were set to 1, and those greater than 6 were set to 6. The remaining non-integer weights were then rounded sequentially to reduce the distance of the estimated totals from the targets. Calibration adjustments began with the computation of a priority index for each record. The priority index was the absolute value of the gradient of the relative error associated with increasing or decreasing a record's weight by one. The record with the highest priority index was then selected as a candidate to increase or decrease its weight by one to reduce the cumulative distance from the targets as measured by the relative error. If the new value produced an improvement and satisfied the range restrictions, the weight was updated and new priorities were assigned; otherwise, the record with the next highest priority index was processed. This process was iteratively performed until convergence was attained. Because census data collection was assumed to be complete for very large and unique farms, their weights were set to 1 during the calibration adjustment process. For all other farms, the final census record weights were forced to be an integer number in the interval [1, 6]. The calibration process considered all targets simultaneously through the priority index. Although calibration was seldom able to adjust weights so that all State targets were met, all targets were brought collectively as close to the targets as possible. The proportions of selected census data items that were due to coverage, response, and classification adjustments are displayed in Tables A and C. DISCLOSURE REVIEW After tabulation and review of the aggregates, a comprehensive disclosure review was conducted. NASS is obligated to withhold, under Title 7, U.S. Code, any total that would reveal an individual's information or allow it to be closely estimated by the public. Farm counts are not considered sensitive and are not subject to disclosure controls. Cell suppression was used to protect the cells that were determined to be sensitive to a disclosure of information. Based on agency standards, data cells were determined to be sensitive to a disclosure of information if they failed either of two rules. The threshold rule failed if the data cell contained less than three operations. For example, if only one farmer produced turkeys in a county, NASS could not publish the county total for turkey inventory without disclosing that individual's information. The dominance rule failed if the distribution of the data within the cell allowed a data user to estimate any respondent's data too closely. For example, if there are many farmers producing turkeys in a county and some of them were large enough to dominate the cell total, NASS could not publish the county total for turkey inventory without risking disclosing an individual respondent's data. In both of these situations, the data were suppressed and a "(D)" was placed in the cell in the census publication table. These data cells are referred to as primary suppressions. Since most items were summed to marginal totals, primary suppressions within these summation relationships were protected by ensuring that there were additional suppressions within the linear relationship that provided adequate protection for the primary. A detailed computer routine selected additional data cells for suppression to ensure all primary suppressions were properly protected. These data cells are referred to as complementary suppressions. These cells are not themselves sensitive to a disclosure of information but were suppressed to protect other primary suppressions. A "(D)" was also placed in the cell of the census publication table to indicate a complementary suppression. A data user cannot determine whether a cell with a (D) represents a primary or a complementary suppression. Regional field office analysts reviewed all complementary suppressions to ensure no cells had been withheld that were vital to the data users. In instances where complementary suppressions were deemed critically important to a State or county, analysts requested an override, and a different complementary cell was chosen. CENSUS QUALITY The purpose of the census of agriculture is to account for "any place from which $1,000 or more of agricultural products were produced and sold, or normally would have been sold, during the census year." To accomplish this, NASS develops a CML that contains identifying information for operations that have an indication of meeting the census definition, develops procedures to collect agricultural information from those records, establishes criteria for analyst review of the data, creates computer routines to correct or complete the requested information, and provides census estimates of the characteristics of farms and farm producers with associated measures of uncertainty. It is not likely that either the CML includes all operations that meet the definition of a farm or that all those that do meet the definition of a farm respond to the census inquiry. The goal is to publish data with a high level of quality. The quality of a census may be measured in many ways. One of the first indicators used is a measure of the response to the census data collection as it has generally been thought that a high response rate indicates more complete coverage of the population of interest. This is a valid assumption if the enumeration list, the CML here, has complete coverage of the population of interest. In the case of the census of agriculture, the definition requiring advance knowledge of sales makes achieving a high level of coverage difficult. To ensure that the census of agriculture is as complete as possible, records are included that might not meet the census definition of a farm - in fact, almost 50 percent more records than the anticipated number of qualifying farm operations were included in the 2022 CML. A second indicator of quality then is the coverage of the farm population by the CML. Other indicators of quality relate to the accuracy and completeness of the data, and the validity of the procedures used in processing the data. In some cases, NASS was able to produce measures of quality - such as the response rate to the data collection, the coverage of the census mail list, and the variability of the final adjusted estimates. In other cases, measures were not produced but descriptions of procedures that NASS used to reduce errors from the procedures were subsequently provided. Census Response Rate The response rate is one indicator of the quality of a data collection. It is generally assumed that if a response rate is close to a full participation level of 100 percent, the potential for nonresponse bias is small, although this has been questioned in the literature. The response rate for the 2022 Census of Agriculture CML was 61.0 percent, as compared with the 2017 Census of Agriculture's response rate of 71.8 percent and 74.6 percent for the 2012 Census of Agriculture. The 2022 Census of Agriculture's response rate used the fourth response rate formula (RR4) from the American Association of Public Opinion Research's Response Rate Standard Definitions manual: where Cadj = number of fully and partially completed records, excluding replicated records R = number of explicit refusals NC = number of non-contacted operations known to be eligible O = number of other types of nonrespondents Replicated = number of replicated records U = number of operations of unknown eligibility e(U) = estimated number of operations of unknown eligibility assumed to be eligible Records were classified into the above variables based on the combination of their active status (AS) codes, in-scope status, and replication status. Active status refers to the eligibility status of records for selection on the CML. All replicated records were considered a form of nonresponse and were classified into other nonrespondents; in-scope status was considered immaterial. Certain active status classifications indicated records of unknown agricultural status. These classifications included records to be removed from the CML but had data from outside sources indicating agricultural activity, new records from outside data sources, nonrespondents and refusals to the NACS, records for regional office handling only, and records with Farm Service Agency or Conservation Reserve Program data on operations that are not owned by the principal producer. These records were stratified (grouped) based on their probabilities of being in-scope had they responded. The estimated number of in-scope nonrespondents was calculated for the hth stratum (group) by the following formula: where e(Uh) = estimated number of operations of unknown eligibility assumed to be eligible in the hth group Cin-scope,h = the number of completed and in-scope census records in the hth group Ch = the number of completed census records in the hth group Uh = number of operations of unknown eligibility in the hth group Census Coverage As a side-product of the statistical adjustment used to account for undercoverage, nonresponse of farms on the CML, and misclassification of responses to the census, the proportion of the adjustments due to each of those factors can be derived. The percentage of final census estimates due to adjustments for undercoverage, nonresponse, and misclassification as well as the total percent adjustment for selected items are displayed in Tables A and C. MEASURED ERRORS IN THE CENSUS PROCESS NASS uses statistical procedures in compiling the CML, in its data collection procedures, in data editing and processing, and in compiling the final data. Additionally, it uses statistical procedures to both measure errors in the various processes when adjusting for those errors in the final data. One example is the statistical process used to account for undercoverage, nonresponse of farms on the CML, and misclassification of responses to the census. The basis of the undercoverage adjustment is the capture-recapture procedure that uses the area sample enumeration from the JAS. The largest contributors to error in the census estimates are due to the adjustments for nonresponse, undercoverage, misclassification, and integer calibration. Variability in Census Estimates due to Statistical Adjustment In conducting the 2022 Census of Agriculture, efforts were initiated to measure error associated with the adjustments for farm operations that were not on the CML; for farm operations that were on the CML but did not respond to the census report form; for farms and nonfarms that were misclassified as nonfarms and farms, respectively; and for integer calibration. These error measurements were developed from the standard error of the estimates at the national, State, and county levels and were expressed as coefficients of variation (CVs) at the national and State levels and as generalized coefficients of variation (GCVs) at the county levels. The standard error of an estimate is an estimate of the standard deviation of the sampling distribution of the estimator. In each case, standard errors were computed using an approach based on a delete-a-group jackknife methodology. To conduct the jackknifing, k = 10 mutually exclusive and exhaustive groups of records were formed. The groups were selected using a stratified random design so that each group reflected capture status by the CML and the JAS. Based on estimated weights for records in each group, a delete-a-group jackknife estimator of the variance would account for the uncertainty associated with modeling the capture-recapture probabilities and the uncertainty due to integer calibration. Therefore, the weights within each jackknife group were computed using the group-specific models and calibrated to match group-specific targets. For a given data item i, such as the number of farms, the estimate was computed at the specified geographical level, such as nation, State, or county, using the weights obtained for group j. Estimates of the variance and standard error associated with the estimator Ti are then, respectively, Ten (10) calibration-adjusted jackknife groups were used to provide standard errors for 2022 State and national estimates (i.e., k=10). For the estimate of the number of farms with a given set of characteristics, only the CML records with those characteristics were used to obtain the overall estimate as well as the estimates from each calibrated jackknife group. Note that the calibrated jackknife groups were only constructed once, and different subsets of the records were used to compute estimates and standard errors for the data items. The CV is a measure of the relative amount of error associated with the sample estimate: where SE(Ti) is the standard error of the capture-recapture estimate for data item i. This relative measure allows the reliability of a range of estimates to be compared. For example, the standard error is often larger for large population estimates than for small population estimates, but the large population estimates may have a smaller CV, indicating a more reliable estimate. For county-level estimates, a generalized coefficient of variation (GCV) was determined for each estimate within a State. A generalized variance function relates a function of the variance of an estimator to a function of the estimator. Within a State, the standard error of an estimate for a data item was often found to be linearly related to the estimate of that item with an intercept of zero. Based on this modeled relationship, the GCV is the slope of the line relating the standard error to the estimate, multiplied times 100 to represent the GCV as a percentage. The standard error is the product of the CV (or GCV for county estimates) and the estimate divided by 100. As an example, if the GCV for a State is 25 percent and a county's estimate is 4, then the standard error is 25(4)/100 = 1. The standard error of an estimated data item from the census provides a measure of the uncertainty associated with that estimated data item due to the possible outcomes of the census collection, including incompleteness of the CML, nonresponse to the census, misclassification either as a farm or as a nonfarm, and the integer calibration. With 95 percent confidence, an estimate is within two standard errors of the true value being estimated. For this example, with 95 percent confidence, the estimate of 4 is within 2(1) = 2 of the true county value. Note: The standard errors and consequently, the CVs tend to be substantially smaller than those reported for the 2017 Census of Agriculture. For 2017, the model of the probability of capture incorporated information from the approximately 40,000 respondents to the 2017 JAS and the census records matching a JAS record. In contrast, the models for the 2022 Census of Agriculture relied on information from the approximately 1 million responding CML records and the 2022 JAS, some of which were on both the CML and the JAS. The large increase in the number of records used in the modeling process led to a major decrease in the measures of uncertainty (standard errors and CVs). Table B presents the fully adjusted estimates with the coefficient of variation for selected items. NONMEASURED ERRORS IN THE CENSUS PROCESS As noted in the previous section, errors can be introduced from adjustments for coverage, nonresponse, and misclassification and from integer calibration. These errors are measurable. However, nonsampling errors are imbedded in the census process that cannot be directly measured as part of the design of the census but must be contained to ensure an accurate count. Extensive efforts were made to compile a complete and accurate mail list for the census, to elicit response to the census, to design an understandable report form with clear instructions, to minimize processing errors through the use of quality control measures, to reduce matching error associated with the capture-recapture estimation process, and to minimize error associated with identification of a respondent as a farm operation (referred to as classification error). The weight adjustment and tabulation processes recognize the presence of nonsampling errors; however, it is assumed that these errors are small and that, in total, the net effect is zero. In other words, the positive errors cancel the negative errors. Respondent and Enumerator Error Incorrect or incomplete responses to the census report form or to the questions posed by an enumerator can introduce error into the census data. Steps were taken in the design and execution of the Census of Agriculture to reduce errors from respondent reporting. Poor instructions and ambiguous definitions lead to misreporting. Respondents may not remember accurately, may estimate responses, or may record an item in the wrong cell. To reduce reporting and recording errors, the report form was tested prior to the census using industry-accepted cognitive testing procedures. Detailed instructions for completing the report form were provided to each respondent. Questions were phrased as clearly as possible based on previous tests of the report form. Computer-assisted telephone interviewing software included immediate integrity checks of recorded responses so suspect data could be verified or corrected. In addition, each respondent's answers were checked for completeness and consistency by the complex edit and imputation system. Processing Error Processing of each census report form was another potential source of nonsampling error. All mail returns that included multiple reports, respondent remarks, or that were marked out of business and report forms with no reported data were sent to an analyst for verification and appropriate action. Integrity checks were performed by the imaging system and data transfer functions. Standard quality control procedures were in place that required that randomly selected batches of data keyed from image be re-entered by a different operator to verify the work and evaluate key entry operators. All systems and programs were thoroughly tested before going on-line and were monitored throughout the processing period. Developing accurate processing methods is complicated by the complex structure of agriculture. Among the complexities are the many places to be included, the variety of arrangements under which farms are operated, the continuing changes in the relationship of producers to the farm operated, the expiration of leases and the initiation or renewal of leases, the problem of obtaining a complete list of agriculture operations, the difficulty of contacting and identifying some types of contractor/contractee relationships, the producer's absence from the farm during the data collection period, and the producer's opinion that part or all of the operation does not qualify and should not be included in the census. During data collection and processing of the census, all operations underwent a number of quality control checks to ensure results were as accurate as possible. Item Nonresponse All item nonresponse actions provide another opportunity to introduce measurement errors. Regardless of whether previously reported data, administrative data, the nearest neighbor algorithm, the fully conditional specification method, or manual imputation is used to complete a nonresponse item, some risk exists that the imputed value does not equal the actual value. Previously reported and administrative data were used only when they related to the census reference period. A new nearest neighbor was randomly selected for each incident to eliminate the chance of a consistent bias. Record Matching Error The process of building and expanding the CML involves finding new list sources and checking for names not on the list. An automated processing system compared each new name to the existing CML names and "linked" like records for the purpose of preventing duplication. New names with strong links to a CML name were discarded and those with no links were added as potential farms. Names with weak links, possible matches, were reviewed by staff to determine whether the new name should be added. Despite this thorough review, some new names may have been erroneously added or deleted. Additions could contribute to duplication (overcoverage) whereas deletions could contribute to undercoverage. As a result, some names received more than one report form, and some farm producers did not receive a report form. Respondents were instructed to complete one form and return all forms so the duplication could be removed. Another chance for error came when comparing June Area Survey tract producer names to the CML. Area producers whose names were not found on the CML were part of the measure of list incompleteness, or NML. Mistakes in determining overlap status resulted in overcounts (including a tract whose producer was on the CML) or undercounts (excluding a tract whose producer was not on the CML). All tracts determined to not be on the list were triple checked to eliminate, or at least minimize, any error. NML tract producers were mailed a report form printed in a different color. To identify duplication, all respondents who received multiple report forms were instructed to complete the CML version and return all forms so duplication could be removed. Records in the 2022 JAS were matched to the 2022 census using probabilistic record linkage. The records of operations with differing farm status were sent out to be reviewed by NASS regional field offices. If farm status could not be resolved, the probability of an operation being a farm was imputed using a missing data model. The uncertainty associated with this estimate apart from model uncertainty was accounted for, but errors not found through this process were not. Table A. Summary of State Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Adjustment : Percent of total : Percent of total : Percent of total : : Standard : as percent : adjustment : adjustment from : adjustment from Item : Total : error : of total : from coverage : nonresponse : misclassification ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms ..........................................................number: 22,877 1,266 42.7 15.1 19.1 8.5 Land in farms ...................................................acres: 11,547,963 897,873 18.9 1.3 11.4 6.2 : Farms by size: : 1 to 9 acres ..................................................farms: 5,785 391 51.1 27.6 17.6 5.9 acres: 27,849 1,607 50.8 27.3 17.6 5.9 10 to 49 acres ................................................farms: 6,977 612 45.4 18.4 20.1 6.9 acres: 152,698 10,532 43.7 15.9 20.4 7.4 50 to 69 acres ................................................farms: 881 73 38.8 11.2 18.5 9.1 acres: 50,791 4,198 38.7 11.2 18.5 9.0 70 to 99 acres ................................................farms: 1,133 51 40.4 9.0 18.8 12.6 acres: 91,750 4,224 40.4 9.0 18.7 12.7 100 to 139 acres ..............................................farms: 960 48 40.7 10.4 19.2 11.2 acres: 111,409 5,756 40.6 10.2 19.3 11.1 140 to 179 acres ..............................................farms: 927 94 42.9 9.4 19.5 14.0 acres: 146,182 14,864 43.1 9.3 19.5 14.2 180 to 219 acres ..............................................farms: 517 27 36.0 9.9 15.5 10.5 acres: 102,688 4,932 36.1 9.9 15.6 10.6 220 to 259 acres ..............................................farms: 432 26 35.6 8.4 17.5 9.8 acres: 103,105 6,245 35.7 8.4 17.5 9.8 260 to 499 acres ..............................................farms: 1,566 55 39.3 5.1 22.9 11.3 acres: 567,714 19,654 39.3 4.9 23.3 11.1 500 to 999 acres ..............................................farms: 1,384 131 37.5 2.3 24.8 10.4 acres: 969,169 94,286 37.6 2.2 25.2 10.2 1,000 to 1,999 acres ..........................................farms: 1,048 130 30.0 1.9 17.8 10.3 acres: 1,441,051 176,024 30.1 1.8 17.7 10.6 2,000 acres or more ...........................................farms: 1,267 118 21.0 1.0 10.2 9.8 acres: 7,783,557 626,433 10.9 0.5 6.6 3.8 : Irrigated land use: : Harvested cropland ............................................farms: 10,389 588 36.0 12.5 15.2 8.3 acres: 2,904,105 98,417 21.9 1.3 10.1 10.5 Pastureland and other land ....................................farms: 6,620 294 43.4 17.3 20.8 5.3 acres: 263,394 26,849 24.0 4.9 16.1 3.0 : Market value of agricultural products sold .....................$1,000: 10,892,201 232 11.1 2.1 3.5 5.4 : Farms by value of sales: : Less than $1,000 ..............................................farms: 6,418 825 60.8 19.4 30.8 10.5 $1,000: 663 (Z) 62.0 40.0 14.1 7.9 $1,000 to $2,499 ..............................................farms: 2,630 151 50.2 26.4 16.6 7.2 $1,000: 4,344 (Z) 50.3 26.8 16.2 7.3 $2,500 to $4,999 ..............................................farms: 2,135 122 42.1 24.4 11.3 6.3 $1,000: 7,640 (Z) 42.0 24.4 11.3 6.3 $5,000 to $9,999 ..............................................farms: 2,284 100 41.4 22.5 12.7 6.2 $1,000: 15,832 1 41.2 22.4 12.6 6.2 $10,000 to $19,999 ............................................farms: 1,726 75 27.8 10.5 10.8 6.4 $1,000: 24,274 1 28.2 10.4 11.2 6.5 $20,000 to $24,999 ............................................farms: 453 42 21.2 7.2 9.1 4.9 $1,000: 10,023 1 21.4 7.3 9.1 5.0 $25,000 to $39,999 ............................................farms: 1,030 64 31.1 8.4 15.3 7.4 $1,000: 32,550 2 31.1 8.5 15.2 7.4 $40,000 to $49,999 ............................................farms: 421 27 28.5 6.7 13.1 8.6 $1,000: 18,602 1 28.7 6.6 13.4 8.6 $50,000 to $99,999 ............................................farms: 1,220 84 25.9 6.2 12.5 7.2 $1,000: 86,286 6 26.0 6.1 12.6 7.2 $100,000 to $249,999 ..........................................farms: 1,392 89 32.7 5.3 16.2 11.2 $1,000: 224,272 15 32.9 5.0 16.5 11.4 $250,000 to $499,999 ..........................................farms: 1,079 140 37.4 2.5 23.1 11.8 $1,000: 385,349 49 37.3 2.4 23.0 11.9 $500,000 to $999,999 ..........................................farms: 761 88 29.2 1.7 18.1 9.4 $1,000: 544,075 65 29.8 1.6 18.7 9.4 $1,000,000 or more ............................................farms: 1,328 52 22.0 2.6 9.9 9.5 $1,000: 9,538,291 196 8.0 1.8 1.8 4.4 : Farms by legal status for tax purposes: : Family or individual ..........................................farms: 18,427 1,040 43.4 18.0 17.7 7.7 acres: 4,611,219 492,913 24.4 3.4 10.6 10.4 Partnership ...................................................farms: 1,752 123 38.4 6.6 20.9 10.9 acres: 2,798,624 157,000 15.8 0.9 7.2 7.8 Corporation: : Family held .................................................farms: 1,883 149 38.3 5.9 22.5 9.9 acres: 2,758,073 199,852 17.0 0.5 12.7 3.9 Other than family held ......................................farms: 262 20 47.7 6.7 31.8 9.2 acres: 275,169 16,884 23.6 2.5 12.6 8.5 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : American Indian Reservation, etc .............................farms: 553 32 44.7 11.5 22.7 10.5 acres: 1,104,878 83,501 7.7 1.3 4.9 1.4 : Tenure: : Full owners ...................................................farms: 17,125 1,049 45.5 17.9 19.8 7.9 acres: 4,752,115 477,275 20.4 1.7 14.5 4.2 Part owners ...................................................farms: 4,463 210 33.6 4.1 16.0 13.5 acres: 5,825,698 410,217 17.7 0.7 6.3 10.7 Tenants .......................................................farms: 1,289 69 36.8 6.7 23.8 6.2 acres: 970,150 45,861 19.1 1.5 14.7 2.9 : Producers characteristics by- 1/ (see text) : Sex of operator: : Male ........................................................farms: 21,373 1,232 42.6 14.7 19.7 8.1 acres: 11,260,574 865,511 18.7 1.3 11.6 5.9 Female ......................................................farms: 15,634 1,107 44.6 19.0 16.5 9.1 acres: 6,186,588 529,640 21.0 2.1 8.5 10.4 : Primary occupation: : Farming .....................................................farms: 17,793 964 37.9 10.8 19.1 7.9 Other .......................................................farms: 25,540 1,863 48.9 13.9 26.9 8.2 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table A. Summary of State Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Adjustment : Percent of total : Percent of total : Percent of total : : Standard : as percent : adjustment : adjustment from : adjustment from Item : Total : error : of total : from coverage : nonresponse : misclassification ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Producers characteristics by- 1/ (see text) - Con. : : Hispanic, Latino, or : Spanish origin ...............................................farms: 1,091 383 49.6 6.5 36.2 6.9 acres: 534,607 82,456 17.1 1.0 11.4 4.7 : Race: : American Indian or : Alaska Native ..............................................farms: 236 109 41.1 17.5 16.4 7.3 acres: 536,981 26,441 3.5 0.6 2.1 0.7 Asian .......................................................farms: 124 36 44.4 6.2 27.3 10.9 acres: 42,266 24,498 16.7 1.5 10.6 4.5 Black or African American ...................................farms: 17 (H) 11.8 6.3 4.1 1.3 acres: 6,449 499 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 Native Hawaiian or : Other Pacific Islander .....................................farms: 36 9 33.3 15.8 9.2 8.3 acres: 8,200 3,965 33.4 7.0 19.6 6.7 White .......................................................farms: 22,660 1,228 42.8 15.1 19.2 8.4 acres: 11,126,600 896,873 19.5 1.4 11.8 6.4 More than one race reported .................................farms: 293 93 43.0 3.1 34.9 5.0 acres: 73,672 11,723 20.8 1.3 12.8 6.6 : Military service: : Never served or only on active duty for training : in the Reserves or National Guard (see text) ..........producers: 39,671 2,563 44.3 12.2 24.1 8.0 Active duty now or in the past (see text) ...............producers: 3,662 225 45.3 18.5 19.2 7.6 : All producers by age group 1/: : Under 25 years ................................................farms: 832 467 66.3 4.4 55.0 6.9 25 to 34 years ................................................farms: 3,027 275 57.2 13.4 29.9 13.9 35 to 44 years ................................................farms: 6,911 496 51.5 10.6 34.2 6.7 45 to 54 years ................................................farms: 7,320 526 44.5 13.8 21.7 8.9 55 to 64 years ................................................farms: 10,123 790 42.5 15.0 17.8 9.7 65 to 74 years ................................................farms: 10,095 605 39.2 15.3 15.9 8.0 75 years and over .............................................farms: 5,025 389 37.6 16.8 15.0 5.8 : Net cash farm income of operations: : Farms with gains of- 2/ : Less than $1,000 ............................................farms: 625 49 44.3 23.7 12.8 7.8 $1,000: 292 (Z) 44.0 25.7 11.9 6.4 $1,000 to $4,999 ............................................farms: 1,519 100 42.6 16.5 16.9 9.2 $1,000: 4,175 (Z) 41.8 15.6 16.8 9.4 $5,000 to $9,999 ............................................farms: 841 71 33.2 10.5 15.0 7.7 $1,000: 6,054 1 32.2 10.0 14.6 7.5 $10,000 to $24,999 ..........................................farms: 1,326 117 33.1 8.5 15.2 9.4 $1,000: 22,014 2 32.9 8.2 15.2 9.4 $25,000 to $49,999 ..........................................farms: 1,020 71 35.0 6.7 17.4 11.0 $1,000: 36,990 3 34.6 6.5 17.3 10.8 $50,000 or more .............................................farms: 3,627 217 29.3 3.4 15.9 10.0 $1,000: 2,394,028 90 16.5 2.3 6.1 8.0 : Farms with losses of- : Less than $1,000 ............................................farms: 848 69 50.2 22.5 19.8 7.9 $1,000: 438 (Z) 49.0 22.1 19.3 7.6 $1,000 to $4,999 ............................................farms: 3,810 322 52.2 18.8 26.7 6.7 $1,000: 11,308 1 52.6 16.3 29.8 6.5 $5,000 to $9,999 ............................................farms: 2,928 187 49.7 26.9 15.2 7.6 $1,000: 21,300 1 49.7 27.0 15.1 7.6 $10,000 to $24,999 ..........................................farms: 3,582 265 47.3 22.2 17.2 7.9 $1,000: 56,848 4 47.2 22.1 17.2 8.0 $25,000 to $49,999 ..........................................farms: 1,445 93 45.7 20.1 16.6 9.0 $1,000: 50,622 3 45.7 19.7 16.9 9.1 $50,000 or more .............................................farms: 1,306 57 37.0 5.1 23.2 8.7 $1,000: 288,946 16 28.4 2.9 17.8 7.8 : Livestock and poultry: : Cattle and calves inventory ...................................farms: 8,956 421 36.8 31.2 4.2 1.4 number: 2,517,987 64,617 6.8 4.9 0.9 1.1 Beef cows inventory .........................................farms: 7,379 348 36.5 30.6 4.5 1.4 number: 449,249 12,090 17.1 8.5 5.9 2.8 Milk cows inventory .........................................farms: 549 29 26.0 22.1 2.8 1.1 number: 664,479 15,503 3.2 2.4 0.1 0.7 Hog and pigs inventory ........................................farms: 562 75 48.0 25.7 15.6 6.8 number: 21,157 1,311 16.7 8.6 1.4 6.7 Layers inventory ............................................. farms: 3,514 173 49.3 24.1 18.1 7.2 number: 638,424 67,297 5.6 4.1 0.5 1.0 Broilers sold .................................................farms: 155 9 45.8 17.9 21.8 6.1 number: 11,815 1,025 29.0 14.9 9.3 4.8 Aquaculture sold ..............................................farms: 51 3 9.8 6.2 1.0 2.6 $1,000: 76,464 2 8.5 5.2 (Z) 3.3 : Selected crops harvested: : Corn for grain ................................................farms: 648 99 33.3 2.8 17.2 13.3 acres: 126,508 15,480 16.2 0.6 7.5 8.1 Durum wheat for grain .........................................farms: 50 10 26.0 3.1 4.6 18.3 acres: 10,250 1,995 19.3 0.6 1.7 17.0 Other spring wheat for grain ..................................farms: 918 169 31.8 1.0 16.9 13.8 acres: 365,898 50,763 20.4 0.4 8.3 11.7 Winter wheat for grain ........................................farms: 1,706 353 29.6 1.3 18.2 10.1 acres: 786,449 100,751 17.6 0.2 7.5 9.9 Sorghum for grain .............................................farms: 5 4 60.0 1.3 36.5 22.2 acres: 485 141 22.3 0.6 13.2 8.5 Soybeans for beans ............................................farms: 8 3 37.5 4.3 29.8 3.4 acres: 304 126 41.8 3.9 34.5 3.4 Rice ..........................................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Cotton ........................................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table A. Summary of State Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Adjustment : Percent of total : Percent of total : Percent of total : : Standard : as percent : adjustment : adjustment from : adjustment from Item : Total : error : of total : from coverage : nonresponse : misclassification ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : Peanuts .......................................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Barley ........................................................farms: 1,322 105 31.8 2.9 18.2 10.7 acres: 538,586 33,628 25.4 1.1 12.0 12.3 Oats ..........................................................farms: 115 17 35.7 3.0 13.3 19.3 acres: 11,088 1,807 27.6 0.7 14.3 12.5 : Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : grass silage, and greenchop ..................................farms: 10,279 557 34.1 17.4 9.0 7.7 acres: 1,415,865 80,767 25.1 3.2 11.5 10.5 Land in vegetables (see text) .................................farms: 1,235 68 39.8 7.4 20.8 11.6 acres: 334,276 6,688 6.3 0.1 1.7 4.4 Potatoes ....................................................farms: 529 137 26.5 2.8 14.1 9.6 acres: 301,157 12,026 2.5 0.1 0.5 1.9 Tomatoes in the open ........................................farms: 215 14 44.2 13.3 21.7 9.1 acres: 62 4 29.9 9.6 14.9 5.3 Sweet corn (see text) .......................................farms: 221 56 44.3 11.4 24.0 9.0 acres: 3,282 1,355 36.9 1.9 27.2 7.8 Lettuce .....................................................farms: 142 16 46.5 13.9 22.0 10.6 acres: 681 504 57.7 4.3 41.8 11.6 Land in orchards (see text) ...................................farms: 567 75 33.5 9.3 16.6 7.6 acres: 5,523 295 3.7 0.4 2.0 1.2 Apples ......................................................farms: 320 40 32.2 8.6 17.2 6.4 acres: 1,936 36 2.9 0.8 1.3 0.7 Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) .....................farms: 137 23 26.3 5.8 12.5 8.0 acres: 1,175 196 5.5 0.4 3.1 2.0 Oranges .....................................................farms: - - - - - - acres: - - - - - - Almonds .....................................................farms: 8 3 25.0 8.0 9.5 7.4 acres: 2 1 40.0 13.1 14.2 12.7 Land in berries ...............................................farms: 268 25 31.0 11.4 13.4 6.2 acres: 207 17 13.0 3.7 6.3 3.0 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. Table B. Reliability Estimates of State Totals: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : :Coefficient :: : :Coefficient : :of variation:: : :of variation Item : Total : (percent) :: Item : Total : (percent) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Farms .....................................................number: 22,877 5.5 :: Producers characteristics by- 1/ (see text) - Con. : Land in farms ..............................................acres: 11,547,963 7.8 :: : : :: Hispanic, Latino, or : Farms by size: : :: Spanish origin ..........................................farms: 1,091 35.1 1 to 9 acres .............................................farms: 5,785 6.8 :: acres: 534,607 15.4 acres: 27,849 5.8 :: : 10 to 49 acres ...........................................farms: 6,977 8.8 :: Race: : acres: 152,698 6.9 :: American Indian or : 50 to 69 acres ...........................................farms: 881 8.3 :: Alaska Native .........................................farms: 236 46.0 acres: 50,791 8.3 :: acres: 536,981 4.9 70 to 99 acres ...........................................farms: 1,133 4.5 :: Asian ..................................................farms: 124 28.9 acres: 91,750 4.6 :: acres: 42,266 58.0 100 to 139 acres .........................................farms: 960 5.0 :: Black or African American ..............................farms: 17 (H) acres: 111,409 5.2 :: acres: 6,449 7.7 140 to 179 acres .........................................farms: 927 10.2 :: Native Hawaiian or : acres: 146,182 10.2 :: Other Pacific Islander ................................farms: 36 26.2 180 to 219 acres .........................................farms: 517 5.2 :: acres: 8,200 48.4 acres: 102,688 4.8 :: White ..................................................farms: 22,660 5.4 220 to 259 acres .........................................farms: 432 6.0 :: acres: 11,126,600 8.1 acres: 103,105 6.1 :: More than one race reported ............................farms: 293 31.7 260 to 499 acres .........................................farms: 1,566 3.5 :: acres: 73,672 15.9 acres: 567,714 3.5 :: : 500 to 999 acres .........................................farms: 1,384 9.5 :: Military service: : acres: 969,169 9.7 :: Never served or only on active duty for training : 1,000 to 1,999 acres .....................................farms: 1,048 12.4 :: in the Reserves or National Guard (see text) .....producers: 39,671 6.5 acres: 1,441,051 12.2 :: Active duty now or in the past (see text) ..........producers: 3,662 6.1 2,000 acres or more ......................................farms: 1,267 9.3 :: : acres: 7,783,557 8.0 :: All producers by age group 1/: : : :: Under 25 years ...........................................farms: 832 56.1 Irrigated land use: : :: 25 to 34 years ...........................................farms: 3,027 9.1 Harvested cropland .......................................farms: 10,389 5.7 :: 35 to 44 years ...........................................farms: 6,911 7.2 acres: 2,904,105 3.4 :: 45 to 54 years ...........................................farms: 7,320 7.2 Pastureland and other land ...............................farms: 6,620 4.4 :: 55 to 64 years ...........................................farms: 10,123 7.8 acres: 263,394 10.2 :: 65 to 74 years ...........................................farms: 10,095 6.0 : :: 75 years and over ........................................farms: 5,025 7.7 Market value of agricultural products sold ................$1,000: 10,892,201 2.1 :: : : :: Net cash farm income of operations: : Farms by value of sales: : :: Farms with gains of- 2/ : Less than $1,000 .........................................farms: 6,418 12.9 :: Less than $1,000 .......................................farms: 625 7.9 $1,000: 663 21.0 :: $1,000: 292 8.4 $1,000 to $2,499 .........................................farms: 2,630 5.7 :: $1,000 to $4,999 .......................................farms: 1,519 6.6 $1,000: 4,344 5.8 :: $1,000: 4,175 6.3 $2,500 to $4,999 .........................................farms: 2,135 5.7 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................farms: 841 8.5 $1,000: 7,640 5.7 :: $1,000: 6,054 8.7 $5,000 to $9,999 .........................................farms: 2,284 4.4 :: $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................farms: 1,326 8.9 $1,000: 15,832 4.6 :: $1,000: 22,014 8.4 $10,000 to $19,999 .......................................farms: 1,726 4.3 :: $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................farms: 1,020 6.9 $1,000: 24,274 4.5 :: $1,000: 36,990 6.9 $20,000 to $24,999 .......................................farms: 453 9.2 :: $50,000 or more ........................................farms: 3,627 6.0 $1,000: 10,023 9.2 :: $1,000: 2,394,028 3.7 $25,000 to $39,999 .......................................farms: 1,030 6.2 :: : $1,000: 32,550 6.9 :: Farms with losses of- : $40,000 to $49,999 .......................................farms: 421 6.5 :: Less than $1,000 .......................................farms: 848 8.1 $1,000: 18,602 6.7 :: $1,000: 438 7.9 $50,000 to $99,999 .......................................farms: 1,220 6.9 :: $1,000 to $4,999 .......................................farms: 3,810 8.5 $1,000: 86,286 7.4 :: $1,000: 11,308 9.4 $100,000 to $249,999 .....................................farms: 1,392 6.4 :: $5,000 to $9,999 .......................................farms: 2,928 6.4 $1,000: 224,272 6.6 :: $1,000: 21,300 6.2 $250,000 to $499,999 .....................................farms: 1,079 13.0 :: $10,000 to $24,999 .....................................farms: 3,582 7.4 $1,000: 385,349 12.6 :: $1,000: 56,848 7.6 $500,000 to $999,999 .....................................farms: 761 11.5 :: $25,000 to $49,999 .....................................farms: 1,445 6.4 $1,000: 544,075 12.0 :: $1,000: 50,622 6.5 $1,000,000 or more .......................................farms: 1,328 3.9 :: $50,000 or more ........................................farms: 1,306 4.3 $1,000: 9,538,291 2.1 :: $1,000: 288,946 5.4 : :: : Farms by legal status for tax purposes: : :: Livestock and poultry: : Family or individual .....................................farms: 18,427 5.6 :: Cattle and calves inventory ..............................farms: 8,956 4.7 acres: 4,611,219 10.7 :: number: 2,517,987 2.6 Partnership ..............................................farms: 1,752 7.0 :: Beef cows inventory ....................................farms: 7,379 4.7 acres: 2,798,624 5.6 :: number: 449,249 2.7 Corporation: : :: Milk cows inventory ....................................farms: 549 5.2 Family held ............................................farms: 1,883 7.9 :: number: 664,479 2.3 acres: 2,758,073 7.2 :: Hog and pigs inventory ...................................farms: 562 13.4 Other than family held .................................farms: 262 7.5 :: number: 21,157 6.2 acres: 275,169 6.1 :: Layers inventory ........................................ farms: 3,514 4.9 Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, : :: number: 638,424 10.5 American Indian Reservation, etc ........................farms: 553 5.9 :: Broilers sold ............................................farms: 155 5.8 acres: 1,104,878 7.6 :: number: 11,815 8.7 : :: Aquaculture sold .........................................farms: 51 5.9 Tenure: : :: $1,000: 76,464 2.6 Full owners ..............................................farms: 17,125 6.1 :: : acres: 4,752,115 10.0 :: Selected crops harvested: : Part owners ..............................................farms: 4,463 4.7 :: Corn for grain ...........................................farms: 648 15.2 acres: 5,825,698 7.0 :: acres: 126,508 12.2 Tenants ..................................................farms: 1,289 5.3 :: Durum wheat for grain ....................................farms: 50 20.9 acres: 970,150 4.7 :: acres: 10,250 19.5 : :: Other spring wheat for grain .............................farms: 918 18.4 Producers characteristics by- 1/ (see text) : :: acres: 365,898 13.9 Sex of operator: : :: Winter wheat for grain ...................................farms: 1,706 20.7 Male ...................................................farms: 21,373 5.8 :: acres: 786,449 12.8 acres: 11,260,574 7.7 :: Sorghum for grain ........................................farms: 5 78.2 Female .................................................farms: 15,634 7.1 :: acres: 485 29.0 acres: 6,186,588 8.6 :: Soybeans for beans .......................................farms: 8 41.1 : :: acres: 304 41.5 Primary occupation: : :: Rice .....................................................farms: - - Farming ................................................farms: 17,793 5.4 :: acres: - - Other ..................................................farms: 25,540 7.3 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See footnote(s) at end of table. --continued Table B. Reliability Estimates of State Totals: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : :Coefficient :: : :Coefficient : :of variation:: : :of variation Item : Total : (percent) :: Item : Total : (percent) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Selected crops harvested: - Con. : :: Selected crops harvested: - Con. : : :: Land in vegetables (see text) - Con. : Cotton ...................................................farms: - - :: : acres: - - :: Sweet corn (see text) ..................................farms: 221 25.5 Peanuts ..................................................farms: - - :: acres: 3,282 41.3 acres: - - :: Lettuce ................................................farms: 142 11.4 Barley ...................................................farms: 1,322 8.0 :: acres: 681 73.9 acres: 538,586 6.2 :: Land in orchards (see text) ..............................farms: 567 13.2 Oats .....................................................farms: 115 15.0 :: acres: 5,523 5.3 acres: 11,088 16.3 :: Apples .................................................farms: 320 12.5 : :: acres: 1,936 1.9 Forage - land used for all hay and haylage, : :: Grapes (including muscadine) (see text) ................farms: 137 17.0 grass silage, and greenchop .............................farms: 10,279 5.4 :: acres: 1,175 16.7 acres: 1,415,865 5.7 :: Oranges ................................................farms: - - Land in vegetables (see text) ............................farms: 1,235 5.5 :: acres: - - acres: 334,276 2.0 :: Almonds ................................................farms: 8 31.4 Potatoes ...............................................farms: 529 25.9 :: acres: 2 62.4 acres: 301,157 4.0 :: Land in berries ..........................................farms: 268 9.5 Tomatoes in the open ...................................farms: 215 6.7 :: acres: 207 8.2 acres: 62 5.9 :: : ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. 2/ Farms with total production expenses equal to market value of agricultural products sold, government payments, and farm-related income are included as farms with gains of less than $1,000. Table C. Summary of Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments by County: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Adjustment : Percent of total : Percent of total : Percent of total : Total : Standard : as percent : adjustment : adjustment from : adjustment from Geographic area : (number) : error : of total : from coverage : nonresponse : misclassification ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ALL FARMS (NUMBER) : : State Total : : Idaho ................................................................: 22,877 1,266 42.7 15.1 19.1 8.5 : Counties : : Ada ..................................................................: 1,142 94 43.3 27.0 10.2 6.1 Adams ................................................................: 229 28 41.9 15.6 15.2 11.2 Bannock ..............................................................: 1,005 62 48.8 17.2 23.6 7.9 Bear Lake ............................................................: 353 25 39.1 12.8 18.0 8.3 Benewah ..............................................................: 240 14 45.8 14.8 17.0 14.0 Bingham ..............................................................: 1,081 70 40.4 16.3 17.0 7.1 Blaine ...............................................................: 203 18 38.9 16.0 13.3 9.6 Boise ................................................................: 108 9 49.1 27.0 15.0 7.0 Bonner ...............................................................: 798 69 47.7 23.1 16.2 8.4 Bonneville ...........................................................: 893 61 42.8 12.9 21.8 8.1 : Boundary .............................................................: 319 29 44.2 5.3 28.7 10.2 Butte ................................................................: 147 27 36.7 14.6 13.6 8.5 Camas ................................................................: 111 22 36.0 11.3 13.6 11.2 Canyon ...............................................................: 2,311 151 45.6 21.2 16.2 8.1 Caribou ..............................................................: 399 36 41.1 10.0 20.2 10.8 Cassia ...............................................................: 554 42 36.3 13.9 13.5 8.9 Clark ................................................................: 67 8 29.9 6.9 10.5 12.4 Clearwater ...........................................................: 273 30 46.5 15.6 16.5 14.4 Custer ...............................................................: 235 24 43.0 20.1 14.5 8.3 Elmore ...............................................................: 284 29 40.8 22.1 12.2 6.5 : Franklin .............................................................: 727 46 42.2 14.0 20.0 8.3 Fremont ..............................................................: 545 56 46.1 12.3 22.3 11.4 Gem ..................................................................: 718 53 43.0 17.1 16.7 9.2 Gooding ..............................................................: 499 30 41.9 16.8 17.0 8.2 Idaho ................................................................: 696 61 40.4 14.4 16.0 9.9 Jefferson ............................................................: 679 58 42.9 19.4 15.9 7.5 Jerome ...............................................................: 448 30 37.1 16.7 14.0 6.3 Kootenai .............................................................: 968 101 48.3 22.8 16.3 9.3 Latah ................................................................: 989 62 47.1 16.5 20.5 10.0 Lemhi ................................................................: 306 20 41.2 19.8 14.3 7.1 : Lewis ................................................................: 219 27 41.1 6.7 14.5 19.9 Lincoln ..............................................................: 229 22 39.7 13.0 14.8 11.9 Madison ..............................................................: 358 31 36.9 10.0 17.0 9.8 Minidoka .............................................................: 454 50 37.4 18.1 13.4 6.0 Nez Perce ............................................................: 415 36 43.4 12.5 17.5 13.3 Oneida ...............................................................: 446 69 45.3 10.9 17.9 16.5 Owyhee ...............................................................: 461 74 32.8 2.3 27.0 3.5 Payette ..............................................................: 574 24 40.2 20.4 11.8 8.0 Power ................................................................: 276 59 35.1 6.8 16.9 11.5 Shoshone .............................................................: 44 7 52.3 29.2 15.1 7.9 : Teton ................................................................: 268 18 49.3 12.3 27.4 9.5 Twin Falls ...........................................................: 1,169 52 39.9 16.1 18.6 5.2 Valley ...............................................................: 142 14 40.8 19.1 14.6 7.1 Washington ...........................................................: 495 42 39.2 17.8 12.4 9.1 : LAND IN FARMS (ACRES) : : State Total : : Idaho ................................................................: 11,547,963 897,873 18.9 1.3 11.4 6.2 : Counties : : Ada ..................................................................: 112,556 12,329 19.4 7.0 6.4 5.9 Adams ................................................................: 145,570 5,244 15.5 2.9 7.0 5.6 Bannock ..............................................................: 419,823 71,304 14.5 0.2 13.2 1.1 Bear Lake ............................................................: 209,678 22,608 22.4 1.9 14.5 6.0 Benewah ..............................................................: 130,471 11,485 14.5 1.0 4.7 8.8 Bingham ..............................................................: 897,796 30,303 12.6 1.1 5.5 5.9 Blaine ...............................................................: 259,553 28,225 19.0 3.7 5.0 10.2 Boise ................................................................: 66,311 11,632 18.5 8.5 4.5 5.5 Bonner ...............................................................: 97,446 15,745 50.4 10.0 21.3 19.0 Bonneville ...........................................................: 406,594 93,034 17.6 1.5 12.8 3.2 : Boundary .............................................................: 73,364 11,005 42.7 0.8 31.3 10.6 Butte ................................................................: 99,988 19,328 28.1 2.9 15.4 9.7 Camas ................................................................: 186,429 50,896 17.7 1.1 7.8 8.7 Canyon ...............................................................: 277,388 25,741 28.9 2.3 11.6 15.0 Caribou ..............................................................: 416,460 40,112 24.1 3.0 14.6 6.4 Cassia ...............................................................: 657,664 65,813 16.7 2.1 6.6 8.1 Clark ................................................................: 206,127 5,687 21.2 2.7 6.0 12.5 Clearwater ...........................................................: 66,230 49,597 38.1 8.1 17.6 12.4 Custer ...............................................................: 113,930 11,427 22.4 5.3 10.3 6.8 Elmore ...............................................................: 296,190 48,379 7.7 1.9 2.1 3.7 : Franklin .............................................................: 276,073 54,160 36.2 3.1 24.5 8.6 Fremont ..............................................................: 275,247 22,773 25.9 2.0 8.4 15.5 Gem ..................................................................: 199,547 30,929 20.2 2.0 4.5 13.7 Gooding ..............................................................: 212,600 20,084 24.3 2.7 14.5 7.0 Idaho ................................................................: 545,260 103,732 20.3 2.4 11.3 6.6 Jefferson ............................................................: 262,180 22,337 23.0 0.9 3.8 18.3 Jerome ...............................................................: 180,152 18,060 22.0 2.6 12.6 6.8 Kootenai .............................................................: 107,727 15,177 34.4 9.3 11.5 13.6 Latah ................................................................: 324,990 16,446 22.2 3.0 11.3 7.9 Lemhi ................................................................: 131,616 7,906 15.2 4.3 7.7 3.2 Lewis ................................................................: 249,015 38,054 25.6 1.1 9.8 14.7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --continued Table C. Summary of Coverage, Nonresponse, and Misclassification Adjustments by County: 2022 (continued) [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- : : : Adjustment : Percent of total : Percent of total : Percent of total : Total : Standard : as percent : adjustment : adjustment from : adjustment from Geographic area : (number) : error : of total : from coverage : nonresponse : misclassification ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LAND IN FARMS (ACRES) - Con. : : Counties - Con. : : Lincoln ..............................................................: 104,847 12,773 24.1 4.6 14.1 5.5 Madison ..............................................................: 166,920 10,835 21.3 1.0 10.7 9.6 Minidoka .............................................................: 308,562 21,424 12.2 0.9 5.1 6.2 Nez Perce ............................................................: 344,412 42,044 19.1 1.8 10.3 7.0 Oneida ...............................................................: 327,714 82,825 29.1 1.0 9.5 18.6 Owyhee ...............................................................: 729,407 31,471 4.2 0.8 2.3 1.1 Payette ..............................................................: 171,424 9,742 16.5 2.2 7.0 7.3 Power ................................................................: 443,958 90,668 12.4 0.7 4.2 7.5 Shoshone .............................................................: 1,605 917 31.3 14.4 12.5 4.4 Teton ................................................................: 112,072 19,389 41.4 3.8 27.0 10.5 : Twin Falls ...........................................................: 459,167 26,216 15.3 2.0 8.7 4.6 Valley ...............................................................: 45,321 10,636 25.4 4.6 12.7 8.1 Washington ...........................................................: 428,579 42,803 12.4 2.5 5.4 4.5 : SALES ($1,000) : : State Total : : Idaho ................................................................: 10,892,201 232 11.1 2.1 3.5 5.4 : Counties : : Ada ..................................................................: 191,322 6 7.5 3.6 2.2 1.8 Adams ................................................................: 15,577 2 16.5 3.6 6.1 6.8 Bannock ..............................................................: 45,676 4 16.2 3.2 5.4 7.6 Bear Lake ............................................................: 29,034 2 23.2 3.2 15.8 4.1 Benewah ..............................................................: 25,444 5 14.6 0.3 5.2 9.1 Bingham ..............................................................: 575,692 20 11.6 0.5 3.8 7.4 Blaine ...............................................................: 65,466 8 40.7 4.3 22.3 14.1 Boise ................................................................: 7,330 2 50.5 12.9 37.0 0.6 Bonner ...............................................................: 14,709 3 32.4 9.5 15.9 7.0 Bonneville ...........................................................: 256,056 13 10.6 0.9 5.9 3.7 : Boundary .............................................................: 48,912 8 31.4 4.8 15.3 11.3 Butte ................................................................: 64,126 14 33.8 2.2 18.0 13.7 Camas ................................................................: 32,695 11 27.5 1.0 14.1 12.4 Canyon ...............................................................: 829,378 27 17.6 2.2 5.6 9.8 Caribou ..............................................................: 114,212 16 19.3 1.4 12.0 5.9 Cassia ...............................................................: 1,153,031 30 8.5 4.2 1.6 2.7 Clark ................................................................: 49,051 5 34.3 4.3 9.4 20.6 Clearwater ...........................................................: 8,481 2 16.1 6.2 2.2 7.7 Custer ...............................................................: 31,092 5 24.9 5.0 11.3 8.6 Elmore ...............................................................: 591,747 3 0.5 0.3 0.1 0.2 : Franklin .............................................................: 131,820 26 32.2 11.2 9.0 12.0 Fremont ..............................................................: 247,228 42 20.9 1.1 10.4 9.3 Gem ..................................................................: 37,861 6 24.9 3.3 7.2 14.4 Gooding ..............................................................: 1,117,613 96 8.5 4.0 2.0 2.5 Idaho ................................................................: 76,139 7 22.1 4.3 10.1 7.7 Jefferson ............................................................: 380,801 23 15.2 0.4 0.9 13.9 Jerome ...............................................................: 944,081 38 6.0 2.5 2.1 1.3 Kootenai .............................................................: 23,353 3 15.7 4.2 4.8 6.7 Latah ................................................................: 101,510 11 13.7 1.0 6.7 6.1 Lemhi ................................................................: 32,180 2 21.4 6.9 9.6 5.0 : Lewis ................................................................: 76,489 8 13.7 0.2 3.9 9.6 Lincoln ..............................................................: 254,603 18 8.5 3.2 3.4 1.9 Madison ..............................................................: 212,410 25 12.9 0.5 6.7 5.7 Minidoka .............................................................: 547,338 25 8.3 1.1 2.8 4.3 Nez Perce ............................................................: 95,985 20 17.1 0.9 7.7 8.5 Oneida ...............................................................: 53,734 11 19.2 1.4 3.6 14.2 Owyhee ...............................................................: 463,023 39 5.3 1.9 1.7 1.6 Payette ..............................................................: 313,664 16 13.3 5.4 4.2 3.7 Power ................................................................: 360,522 19 4.2 0.4 1.4 2.5 Shoshone .............................................................: 222 (Z) 22.1 8.9 9.6 3.5 : Teton ................................................................: 62,626 9 33.1 0.8 28.5 3.8 Twin Falls ...........................................................: 1,135,933 22 8.4 3.8 2.0 2.6 Valley ...............................................................: 12,423 1 12.1 2.1 5.5 4.5 Washington ...........................................................: 61,610 19 25.9 0.9 19.3 5.7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Table D. American Indian or Alaska Native Producers: 2022 [For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text.] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- :American Indian or Alaska Native farm producers:: :American Indian or Alaska Native farm producers :-----------------------------------------------:: :----------------------------------------------- : : Individually : :: : : Individually : Geographic area : Total : reported 1/ : Other 2/ :: Geographic area : Total : reported 1/ : Other 2/ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- State Total : :: Counties - Con. : : :: : Idaho ..........................: 517 517 - :: Fremont ........................: 4 4 - : :: Gem ............................: 9 9 - Counties : :: Gooding ........................: 2 2 - : :: Idaho ..........................: 19 19 - Ada ............................: 17 17 - :: Jefferson ......................: 1 1 - Adams ..........................: 24 24 - :: Jerome .........................: 9 9 - Bannock ........................: 57 57 - :: Kootenai .......................: 22 22 - Bear Lake ......................: 1 1 - :: Latah ..........................: 20 20 - Benewah ........................: 15 15 - :: Lemhi ..........................: 8 8 - Bingham ........................: 34 34 - :: Lewis ..........................: 4 4 - Blaine .........................: 3 3 - :: : Boise ..........................: 1 1 - :: Lincoln ........................: 6 6 - Bonner .........................: 26 26 - :: Madison ........................: 18 18 - Bonneville .....................: 10 10 - :: Nez Perce ......................: 9 9 - : :: Oneida .........................: 18 18 - Boundary .......................: 5 5 - :: Owyhee .........................: 31 31 - Butte ..........................: 1 1 - :: Payette ........................: 14 14 - Camas ..........................: 2 2 - :: Power ..........................: 5 5 - Canyon .........................: 52 52 - :: Shoshone .......................: 4 4 - Cassia .........................: 2 2 - :: Teton ..........................: 2 2 - Clearwater .....................: 5 5 - :: Twin Falls .....................: 12 12 - Custer .........................: 5 5 - :: : Elmore .........................: 8 8 - :: Valley .........................: 3 3 - Franklin .......................: 7 7 - :: Washington .....................: 22 22 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1/ Data were collected for a maximum of four producers per farm. 2/ Data represent American Indian or Alaska Native farm or ranch producers on reservations who did not report individually. Data obtained by reservation officials. Appendix B. General Explanation and Census of Agriculture Report Form DEVELOPMENT OF THE CENSUS REPORT FORMS Before the release of the 2017 Census of Agriculture's results, NASS had already begun preparations for the 2022 Census of Agriculture. The 2022 Census Content Team and the Data Collection Testing Teams evaluated the content and report form design for the census. They reviewed the 2017 report forms, solicited input from both internal and external customers, and developed criteria for determining acceptable content for inclusion in the 2022 Census of Agriculture. The teams tested the effectiveness of the 2022 report forms in various modes of data collection (mail, telephone, personal interview, and web) and made recommendations to NASS senior executives for final determination. Throughout development NASS sought the advice and input from the data user community. Integral partners included the Advisory Committee on Agriculture Statistics, State Departments of Agriculture and other State government officials, Federal agency officials, land grant universities, agricultural trade associations, media, and various community-based organizations. NASS conducted usability testing to assess the user experience for the web report form in April and May 2020. In addition, NASS conducted two rounds of cognitive interviews for the paper report forms in April through August 2020; one to test new and modified questions, and one to test all sections of the report forms. In late 2020 through early 2021, NASS conducted a large-scale content test (OMB No. 0535-0243) of the general census of agriculture forms. This test began in late December 2020 when survey requests were mailed to a nationwide sample of approximately 36,000 farm producers. The paper, web, and telephone report forms were tested for question phrasing, reporting of new commodities, form design and flow, and respondent comprehension. Finally, in January through March 2022, NASS conducted a 15,000 record test of the web form to further evaluate the online submission system and functionality. Testing results from these activities helped determine final report form content and design. A sample copy of the 2022 report form and instruction sheet is included in this appendix. DATA CHANGES Following are descriptions of the report form changes and their effect on the publication tables. Crop Data Changes Added items include: * Gourds * Gooseberries * Hemp was added to both the nursery section and the field crops section * Longan * Lychees * Mulberries * Parsnips * Pawpaws * Rambutan Other changes include: * Sod harvested or intended for sale in future years replaced sod harvested to include sod in production but not harvested. * Vegetable seeds and Vegetable transplants to farm fields moved from Propagative Material Sold to Food Crops Grown Under Glass or Other Protection. Only square feet under protection were collected for these items. * Vegetable seeds grown in the open were moved from the Nursery section and reported under the specific vegetable in the Vegetable section. Items combined with another item(s) on the 2022 report form that were reported individually on the 2017 report form include: * Black, red, and other raspberries were combined into raspberries, all * Summer and winter squash were combined into squash (including zucchini) * Sugarcane for sugar and sugarcane for seed were combined into sugarcane for sugar or seed * Sweet corn for seed in the field crops section was combined into sweet corn in the vegetable section * Temples are recorded under tangerines * Cable, DSL, fiber optic were combined into broadband (high speed) internet Livestock and Poultry Data Changes Added item includes: * Hair sheep or wool-hair crosses inventory Economic, Energy, Land Use Practices, Selected Practices, Organic, Producer Characteristics, and Type of Organization/Legal Status Data Changes Added items include: * Land with irrigation systems or equipment * Precision agricultural practices * Producers' involvement in marketing decisions Deleted items include: * Biodiesel and ethanol production systems * Indication that a person is a principal operator or spouse of a principal operator * Number of acres irrigated in the past five years DEFINITIONS AND EXPLANATIONS The following definitions and explanations provide a detailed description of specific terms and phrases used in this publication. Items in the publication tables which carry the note ''see text'' also are explained. Report form section number references refer to the general version (22-A100). Many of the definitions and explanations are the same as those used in earlier censuses. Acres and quantity harvested. Crops were reported in whole acres, except for the following crops that were reported in tenths of acres: tobacco, hops, nursery and greenhouse crops in the open, vegetables including potatoes and sweet potatoes, fruit and nut crops including land in orchards, and berries. Totals for crops reported in tenths of acres were rounded to whole acres at the aggregate level during the tabulation process. Nursery and greenhouse crops grown under glass or other protection were reported in square feet and are published in square feet. If two or more crops were harvested from the same land during the year (double cropping), the acres were counted for each crop. Therefore, the total acres of all crops harvested could exceed the acres of cropland harvested. No double cropping is allowed for hay or fruit and nut crops. When more than one cutting of hay was taken from the same acres, the acres were counted only once. If there were multiple cuttings of one type of hay production, e.g., two cuttings of alfalfa for dry hay, acreage was reported once, but the quantity harvested includes all cuttings. Acreage cut and tons harvested for both dry hay and haylage, silage, or greenchop were reported for each crop. For interplanted crops or ''skip-row'' crops, acres were reported according to the portion of the field occupied, whether by a crop or whether it was idle land. If a crop was interplanted in an orchard or vineyard and harvested, then the entire orchard or vineyard acreage was reported under the appropriate fruit crop and the interplanted estimated crop acreage was reported under the appropriate crop. If a crop was planted but not harvested, the acres were not reported as harvested. These acres were reported in the Land Use section on the report form under the appropriate items - cropland on which all crops failed or were abandoned, cropland in summer fallow, cropland idle or used for cover crops or soil-improvement but not harvested and not pastured or grazed, or other pasture and grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements. This does not include fruit and nut orchards, vineyards, berries, acres in production for cultivated Christmas trees, and acres in production for short rotation woody crops that were not harvested. Acreage in these commodities were included in cropland harvested regardless of whether the crop was harvested. Abandoned orchards were reported as cropland idle, not as harvested cropland, and the individual abandoned orchard crop acres were not reported. Crops that were grazed by livestock were reported as "Other pasture and grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements." Crop residue left in fields after the 2022 harvest and later grazed by livestock were reported as cropland harvested and not as other pasture or grazing land that could have been used for crops. Quantity harvested was not obtained for crops such as fruits, nuts, berries, vegetables, melons, nursery crops, and greenhouse crops. Agri-tourism and recreational services. See Total income from farm-related sources. Agricultural products sold directly to individuals for human consumption. See Value of food sold directly to consumers. All haylage, grass silage, and greenchop (tons). See Haylage, grass silage, and greenchop, all. All producers. See Producer. All other production expenses. See Total farm production expenses. American Indian and Alaska Native farm producers, total. Data are reported in Chapter 1, tables 52 through 77 and Chapter 2, tables 45 and 49. In Chapter 2, table 49 data are published for a maximum of four producers reported in the Personal Characteristics section of the report form. The individual producers were included on the census mail list for most reservations. Those reservations that did not include all the individual producers on the census mail list were identified and the data for the entire reservation, including the data for the producers that would have met the definition of a farm, were collected on one report form. The count of reservations and the number of producers that were reported on these reservations are included in Appendix A, Table D. Amount from Conservation Reserve, Wetlands Reserve, Farmable Wetlands, and Conservation Reserve Enhancement Programs. See Land enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), Farmable Wetlands Program (FWP), or Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP). Amount from State and local government agricultural program payments. See Total income from farm-related sources. Amount spent to repay CCC loans. See also Commodity Credit Corporation loans. Farming operations that receive a CCC loan can use cash to repay the loan, purchase certificates for use in the repayment, or deliver the pledged collateral as full payment at maturity. If a farmer uses cash instead of certificates to repay the loan, the farmer and the IRS receive an information return showing the market gain realized. The farmer can repay the loan to the CCC and then sell the grain, feed the grain, or store it. These provisions only apply until the maturity date of the loan. After the maturity date of the loan, the entire original loan principal and all accrued interest must be repaid or, as an alternative choice, the crop may be forfeited to CCC. Animal production and aquaculture (112). See Farms by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Any poultry sold. The number of farms with any poultry sold includes all farms with sales of poultry, poultry hatched, or eggs. Aquaculture. Aquaculture is defined as the farming of fish, crustaceans, mollusks, and other aquaculture products. The aquaculture production reported in the census requires some form of intervention in the rearing process and requires inputs such as seeding, stocking, feeding, protection from predators, etc. It also requires ownership of the stock being cultivated and harvesting that is conducted in a controlled environment by the operation. The value of sales includes all sizes and eggs by species and includes aquaculture distributed for restoration, conservation, or recreational purposes, such as State and Federal hatcheries. Distributed fish with unknown values were assigned a value based on sales of farm-raised fish. Aquaculture and other animal production (1125, 1129). See Farms by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Aware of right to appeal an adverse program decision to USDA's National Appeals Division. The National Appeals Division (NAD) of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) provides an independent forum within USDA for program participants to seek administrative appeals of adverse agency decisions. Bantams. See Layers. Bees. See Colonies of honey bees and Honey collected. Berries, all. Refer to Land in berries. Breeding livestock. See Total farm production expenses. Broadband. This item is the number of farms that reported using DSL, cable, or fiber optic connections to the internet. By economic class. See Economic class of farms. Cattle on feed. Cattle on feed are steers and heifers being fed a ration of grain, silage, hay and/or protein supplement for slaughter market that are expected to produce a carcass that will grade select or better. It excludes cattle being "backgrounded only" for later sale as feeders or later placement in another feedlot. Cattle on feed sold. Data are for cattle on feed sold that weighed 500 pounds or more that were shipped directly from the feedlot to the slaughter market. This category excludes cattle that were pastured only, owned cattle that were shipped from feedlots operated by others, background feeder cattle, and veal calves. CCC loans. See Commodity Credit Corporation loans. Cellular data plan. Mobile internet service for a cell phone or other device. This includes counts of farm operations that reported accessing the internet from a mobile device, such as cell phone or tablet. In 2017 this item was labeled mobile broadband plan for a computer or a cell phone. This is a wording change only; data are comparable. Chemicals applied. For each type of chemical used, the acres treated were reported only once even if the acres were treated more than once. If multi- purpose chemicals were used, the acres treated for each purpose were reported. See Total farm production expenses; Chemicals. Cherries. Cherries were reported as either sweet cherries or tart cherries. Combined crops or non-specified cherry acres were not options for the respondent. Total acres, bearing age acres, and nonbearing age acres were reported for each crop. Christmas trees, cultivated. Data are for acres of Christmas trees-cut or to be cut-in production, acres irrigated, and number of trees cut. Sales data are included in the Cut Christmas trees and short rotation woody crops category. Christmas trees, live. Data were reported as nursery stock and include Christmas trees sold live, generally balled and burlapped, from the operation. Coffee. Data include trees grown in the open as well as under shade or in greenhouses. Data for coffee relate to the July 2021 through June 2022 harvest season. Colonies of honey bees. Published colonies inventory is the total number of colonies owned on December 31, 2022. Bee operations with multiple locations reported inventory on the location where the bees were present and the inventory was tabulated in those counties. Inventories in 2022 were tabulated in the county where the operation had the largest value of all agricultural products raised or produced. Package bees were not included as separate colonies. Commodities raised and delivered under production contracts. A production contract is an agreement between a producer or grower and a contractor (integrator) setting terms, conditions, and fees to be paid by the contractor to the operation for the production of crops, livestock, or poultry. The grower receives a payment or fee from the contractor, generally after delivery, which is less than the full market price of the commodity. A production contract involves the shifting of some risk and control from the grower to the contractor. Marketing contracts, futures contracts, forward contracts, or other contracts based strictly on price are not considered production contracts. Commodities sold to a co-op where some of the input items were purchased from the same co-op at a discount price were also excluded. Many operations produce commodities only under production contracts or only independently. Some operations may produce a commodity under production contract and also produce more of the same commodity that they sell independently. The production contract data are totals for the portion of agriculture production raised and delivered under production contract. Crops and livestock inventory, production, and value of sales are the total of all production, both independent and raised under production contract. Custom fed cattle shipped directly for slaughter under a production contract. Cattle under production contract which were not shipped directly to slaughter were reported in either Replacement dairy heifers under production contract or in the Other cattle, sheep, livestock, or poultry under production contract category. Grains, oilseeds, vegetables, melons, potatoes, and other crops under production contract. This category is the number of farms that produced and delivered any crop grown under a production contract. This item was reported as three different categories (grains and oilseeds, vegetables/melons/potatoes, and all other crops). Layers under production contract. The production contract is based on eggs, but the layers are owned by the contractor and are also under contract. The layers are produced at the pullet farm, which may have a separate production contract. Other cattle, sheep, livestock, or poultry under production contract. The data for commodities raised and delivered under a production contract include cattle which were not shipped directly to slaughter (backgrounding), sheep, livestock, and poultry not listed separately. Commodity Credit Corporation loans. This category includes nonrecourse marketing loans for wheat, corn, sorghum, barley, oats, cotton, rice, soybeans, Austrian winter peas, honey, dry edible peas, lentils, chickpeas, peanuts, sunflower seed, flaxseed, canola and other rapeseed, safflower, mustard seed, crambe, sesame seed, wool, and mohair. Corn, Traditional or Indian. Traditional corn is an open-pollinated (non- hybrid), non-GMO cultivar of Zea mays that was indigenously developed and consists of many heritage varieties of sizes, color, and drought tolerance. Traditional corn grown on southwest reservations has been passed from generation to generation through seed saving by American Indian and Hispanic communities. Traditional corn is culturally significant. Cover crop seed purchased. See Total farm production expenses. Crop and livestock insurance payments received. See Total income from farm- related sources. Crop units of measure. The report form allowed the producer to report the quantity of field crops harvested in a unit of measure commonly used in the region. When the producer reported in units different than the unit of measure published, the quantity harvested was converted to the published unit of measure. Crop year or season covered. Acres and quantity harvested are for the calendar year 2022 except for coffee. Data for coffee relate to July 2021 through June 2022. Cropland, harvested. See Harvested cropland. Cropland idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement but not harvested and not pastured or grazed. Cropland idle includes any other acreage which could have been used for crops without any additional improvement and which was not reported as cropland harvested, cropland on which all crops failed, cropland in summer fallow, or other pasture or grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements. This category includes: 1. Land used for cover crops or soil improvement but not harvested or grazed. 2. Land in Federal or State conservation programs that was not hayed or grazed in 2022. 3. Land occupied with growing crops for harvest in 2023 or later years but not harvested or summer fallowed in 2022 (except fruit or nuts in an orchard, grove, or vineyard or berries being maintained for production). Examples are acreage planted in winter wheat, strawberries, etc., for harvest in 2023 and no crop was harvested from these acres in 2022. 4. Land in "skipped" rows between rows of crops or field strips. Cropland in summer fallow. This includes cropland cultivated or treated with herbicides to control weeds and conserve moisture and not seeded or harvested in 2022. It includes cropland summer fallowed in 2022 and planted to a crop (i.e., winter wheat, etc.) for harvest in 2023. Cropland, irrigated. See Irrigated land. Cropland on which intensive tillage practices were used. See Land use practices. Cropland on which reduced tillage, excluding no-till, practices were used. See Land use practices. Cropland, other. See Other cropland. Cropland, total. See Total cropland. Cropland used only for pasture or grazing. See other pasture and grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements. Crustaceans. These are invertebrate animals with jointed legs and a hard- shelled segmented body. Examples include crawfish, lobster, prawns, shrimp, and softshell crabs. Cultivated Christmas trees. See Christmas trees, cultivated. Custom fed cattle shipped directly for slaughter. See Commodities raised and delivered under production contract. Customwork and custom hauling. See Total farm production expenses. Customwork and other agricultural services. See Total income from farm- related sources. Cuttings, seedlings, liners, and plugs. See Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod. Data are based on sample of farms. For censuses from 1987 through 2002, selected data items were collected from only a sample of farms. These data were subject to sampling error. Depreciation expenses claimed. The calculation of total farm production expenses does not include depreciation because it is a capital expense. Depreciation allows the expensing of capital purchases over multiple years. It is not included in the calculation of Net cash farm income. Dry edible beans, excluding chickpeas and limas. Dry edible beans do not include chickpeas, dry lima beans, or dry southern (black eyed/cowpeas). Ducks, geese, and other miscellaneous poultry. See Miscellaneous poultry. Economic class of farms. Economic class data are the classification of farms by the sum of market value of agricultural products sold and Federal farm program payments. See Total market value of agricultural products sold and government payments. See Farms with sales and government payments of less than $1,000. Energy. See Renewable energy producing systems. Equine products. This category includes horse breeding fees, stud fees, semen, and other equine products and excludes boarding, training and riding facilities income. Expenses. See Total farm production expenses. Farm or ranch producer. See Producer. Farms by combined government payments and market value of agricultural products sold. This category represents the value of products sold plus government payments. Total value of products sold combines total sales not under production contract and total sales under production contract. Government payments consist of government payments received from the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), Farmable Wetlands Program (FWP), or Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) plus government payments received from Federal programs other than the CRP, WRP, FWP, and CREP, and Commodity Credit Corporation loans. Farms by economic class. See Economic class of farms and Total market value of agricultural products sold and government payments. Farms by legal status. All farms were classified by legal status in the 2022 census. This section collects information for federal tax purposes to determine an operation's legal status. The classifications used were: 1. Family or individual (sole proprietorship), excluding partnership and corporation. 2. Partnership, including family partnership - in selected tables, partnership was further subclassified into: a. Registered under State law. b. Not registered under State law. 3. Corporation, including family corporations - in selected tables, corporation was further subclassified into: a. Family held or other than family held. b. More than 10 stockholders. 4. Other - estate or trust, prison farm, grazing association, American Indian reservation, etc. Farms by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). The NAICS classifies economic activities. It was jointly developed by Mexico, Canada, and the U.S. NAICS makes it possible to produce comparable industrial statistics for Mexico, Canada, and the U.S. For the 2022 census, all agricultural production establishments (farms, ranches, nurseries, greenhouses, etc.) were classified by type of activity or activities using the NAICS code. The 2022 census is the sixth census to use NAICS. Censuses prior to the 1997 census used the old Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system to classify farms. NAICS was developed to provide a consistent framework for the collection, analysis, and dissemination of industrial statistics used by government policy analysts, academia and researchers, the business community, and the public. It is the first industry classification system developed in accordance with a single principle of aggregation that production units using similar production processes should be grouped together. Though NAICS differs from other industry classification systems, statistics compiled on NAICS are comparable with statistics compiled according to the latest revision of the United Nations' International Standard Industrial Classification, Revision Four, (ISIC, Revision 4) for some 60 high level groupings. Following are explanations of the major classifications used in 2022. Oilseed and grain farming (1111). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in (1) growing oilseed and/or grain crops and/or (2) producing oilseed and grain seeds. These crops have an annual life cycle and are typically grown in open fields. This category includes corn silage and grain silage. Vegetable and melon farming (1121). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in one or more of the following: (1) growing vegetables and/or melon crops, (2) producing vegetable and melon seeds, and (3) growing vegetable and/or melon bedding plants. Fruit and tree nut farming (1113). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in growing fruit and/or tree nut crops. These crops are generally not grown from seeds and have a perennial life cycle. Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production (1114). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in growing crops of any kind under cover and/or growing nursery stock and flowers. ''Under cover'' is generally defined as greenhouses, cold frames, cloth houses, and lath houses. Crops grown are removed at various stages of maturity and have annual and perennial life cycles. The category includes short rotation woody crops and Christmas trees that have a growing and harvesting cycle of 10 years or less. Other crop farming (1119). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in (1) growing crops such as tobacco, cotton, sugarcane, hay, sugarbeets, peanuts, agave, herbs and spices, and hay and grass seeds, or (2) growing a combination of the valid crops with no one crop or family of crops accounting for one-half of the establishment's agricultural production (value of crops for market). Crops not included in this category are oilseeds, grains, vegetables and melons, fruits, tree nuts, greenhouse, nursery and floriculture products. All other crop farming (11199). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in (1) growing crops (except oilseeds and/or grains; vegetables and/or melons; fruits and/or tree nuts; greenhouse, nursery, and/or floriculture products; tobacco; cotton; sugarcane; or hay) or (2) growing a combination of crops (except a combination of oilseed(s) and grain(s)); and a combination of fruit(s) and tree nut(s) with no one crop or family of crops accounting for one-half of the establishment's agricultural production. Animal production and aquaculture (112). Industries in the Animal Production and Aquaculture subsector raise or fatten animals for the sale of animals or animal products and/or raise aquatic plants and animals in controlled or selected aquatic environments for the sale of aquatic plants, animals, or their products. The subsector includes establishments, such as ranches, farms, and feedlots primarily engaged in keeping, grazing, breeding, or feeding animals. These animals are kept for the products they produce or for eventual sale. The animals are generally raised in various environments, from total confinement or captivity to feeding on an open range pasture. The industries in this subsector are grouped by important factors, such as suitable grazing or pasture land, specialized buildings, type of equipment, and the amount and types of labor required. Establishments are classified to the Animal Production and Aquaculture subsector when animal production (i.e., value of animals for market) accounts for one-half or more of the establishment's total agricultural production. Establishments with one-half or more animal production with no one animal product or family of animal products of an industry accounting for one half of the establishment's agricultural production are treated as combination animal farming classified to Industry 11299, All Other Animal Production. Beef cattle ranching and farming (112111). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in raising cattle (including cattle for dairy herd replacements). Pastureland-only farms, those with only 100 or more acres of pastureland, were classified as "All other animal production farming (11299)." Cattle feedlots (112112). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in feeding cattle for fattening. Dairy cattle and milk production (11212). This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in milking dairy cattle. Hog and pig farming (1122). This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in raising hogs and pigs. These establishments may include farming activities, such as breeding, farrowing, and the raising of weanling pigs, feeder pigs, or market size hogs. Poultry and egg production (1123). This industry group comprises establishments primarily engaged in breeding, hatching, and raising poultry for meat or egg production. Sheep and goat farming (1124). This industry group comprises establishments primarily engaged in raising sheep, lambs, and goats, or feeding lambs for fattening. Aquaculture (1125). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in the farm raising of finfish, shellfish, or any other kind of animal aquaculture. These establishments use some form of intervention in the rearing process to enhance production, such as holding in captivity, regular stocking, feeding, and protecting from predators. Other animal production (1129). Comprises establishments primarily engaged in raising animals and insects (except cattle, hogs and pigs, poultry, sheep and goats, and aquaculture) for sale or product production. These establishments are primarily engaged in one of the following: bees, horses and other equine, rabbits and other fur-bearing animals, etc. and producing products such as honey and other bee products. Establishments primarily engaged in raising a combination of animals with no one animal or family of animals accounting for one-half of the establishment's agricultural production are included in this industry group. Farms with only 100 acres or more of pastureland were classified as "All other animal production farming (11299)." Farms by number of households sharing in net income of operation. Households that received funds because they were only landlords, custom equipment producers, or provided other production services were not included. Published data can exceed the number of producers listed under Producers, all. Farms by size. All farms were classified into size groups according to the total land area in the farm. The land area of a farm is an operating unit concept and includes land owned and operated as well as land rented from others. Land rented to or assigned to a tenant was considered part of the tenant's farm and not part of the owner's. Farms by tenure of producer. All farms were classified by tenure of producers. The classifications used were: * Full owners operated only land they owned. * Part owners operated land they owned and also land they rented from others. * Tenants operated only land they rented from others or worked on shares for others. Farms with hired managers are classified according to the land ownership characteristics reported. For example, a corporation owns all the land used on the farm and hires a manager to run the farm. The hired manager is considered the farm producer, and the farm is classified with a tenure type of "full owner" even though the hired manager owns none of the land he/she operates. Farms by typology group. The classifications were based on two criteria: who owned the operation and gross cash farm income (GCFI). GCFI included the producer's sales of crops and livestock, fees for delivering commodities under production contracts, government payments, and farm-related income. Family farms are defined by the operation reporting more than 50 percent of this operation was owned by an operator's household and/or extended family. Small family farms. Farms defined by GCFI less than $349,000. Midsize family farms. Farms defined by GCFI between $350,000 and $999,999. Large family farms. Farms defined by GCFI between one million and five million or more. Non-family farms. Farms defined as the producer and persons related to the producer do not own a majority of the business. Farms by type of organization. The data categorizes an operation's ownership. Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's household and/or extended family. The data are used to measure the producers' ownership interest in the organization. This item is operations with 50 percent or more ownership interest held by operator and/or persons related by blood, marriage, or adoption. Limited Liability Company. This type of farm structure combines the pass- through taxation of a partnership or sole proprietorship with the limited liability of a corporation. Farms by value of sales. See Market value of agricultural products sold. Farms or farms reporting. The terms ''farms'' and ''farms reporting'' in the presentation of data are equivalent. Both represent the number of farms reporting the item. For example, if there are 3,710 farms in a State and 842 of them had 28,594 cattle and calves, the data for those farms reporting cattle and calves would appear as: Cattle and calves farms . . . . . 842 number . . . 28,594 Farms with sales and government payments of less than $1,000. This category includes farms with combined sales and government payments of less than $1,000 but having the potential for sales of $1,000 or more. It provides information on all items for farms that normally would be expected to sell agricultural products of $1,000. Farms with sales of less than $1,000. This category includes farms with sales of less than $1,000 but having the potential for sales of $1,000 or more. Some of these farms had no sales in the census year. It provides information on all report form items for farms that normally would be expected to sell agricultural products of $1,000 or more. Fertilizer. See Total farm production expenses; Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners. Field and grass seed crops, all. Data are for all the field and grass seed crops not published as field crops and include field seed crops which did not have a specific code on the 2022 report form. Food marketing practices. This section consists of sales of edible agricultural products that are both produced and sold by the operation directly to consumers (farmers markets, on farm stores or farm stand, roadside stands or stores, u-pick, CSA, online marketplaces, etc.) or retail markets, institutions, or food hubs for local or regionally branding. Retail and institutional establishments include supermarkets, supercenters, restaurants, caterers, independently owned grocery stores, food cooperatives, K-12 schools, colleges or universities, hospitals, workplace cafeterias, prisons, foodbanks, etc. Forage - land used for all hay and all haylage, grass silage, and greenchop. Data shown represent the area harvested with each acre counted only once if dry hay, haylage, grass silage, or greenchop were cut from the same acreage or if there were multiple cuttings of dry hay, haylage, grass silage, or greenchop. Data exclude corn silage and sorghum silage. Quantity produced is the sum of the quantity harvested of all hay including alfalfa, other dry hay, and all haylage, grass silage and greenchop after converting the all haylage, grass silage, and greenchop quantity harvested to a dry equivalent basis (13 percent moisture). The green tons of all haylage, grass silage, and greenchop harvested were multiplied by a factor of 0.4943 to convert to a dry equivalent. This conversion factor is based on the assumption that one ton of dry hay is 0.87 ton of dry matter, one ton of haylage or grass silage is 0.45 ton dry matter, and one ton of greenchop is 0.25 ton dry matter. The all haylage, grass silage, and greenchop quantity harvested is assumed to be comprised of 90 percent haylage and grass silage and 10 percent greenchop. Therefore, the conversion factor used to adjust all haylage, grass silage, and greenchop quantity harvested to a dry equivalent basis = [(0.45*0.9)+(0.25*0.1)]/0.87 = 0.4943. Fruits and tree nuts. Total acres, bearing age acres, and nonbearing age acres were collected. Geothermal/geoexchange systems. See Renewable energy producing systems. Gooseberries. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, gooseberries were reported in other berries. Gourds. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, gourds were reported in other vegetables. Government payments. This category consists of payments from Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), Farmable Wetlands Program (FWP), and Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP); loan deficiency payments; disaster payments; other conservation programs; and all other Federal farm programs under which payments were made directly to farm producers, including those specified in the 2018 Agricultural Act (Farm Bill), including Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC). Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) proceeds, amount from State and local government agricultural program payments, and Federal crop insurance payments were not tabulated in this category. Grain and bean combines. Data were collected for self-propelled combines only. Grains, oilseeds, dry beans, and dry peas sales. Data are for the total market value of cash grains sold, including corn for grain, seed, or silage; wheat for grain; soybeans for beans; sorghum for grain, seed, or silage; barley for grain; rice; oats for grain; and other grains. Also included is the total market value of cash oilseeds sold, including sunflower seed (oil and non-oil), flaxseed, canola, rapeseed, safflower seed, mustard seed, dry beans, and dry peas. Grains, oilseeds, vegetables, melons, potatoes, and other crops. See Commodities raised and delivered under production contracts. Grapes (including muscadine). This was updated in 2022 for clarification that muscadine grapes should be included. It is a wording change only; data are comparable. Greenhouse fruits and berries. Data include strawberries, raspberries, etc. grown in greenhouses and high tunnels where the crops were always covered. See Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod. Gross cash rent or share payments. See Total income from farm-related sources. Hair sheep or wool-hair crosses. This is a new item for 2022. Harvested cropland. This category includes land from which crops were harvested and hay was cut, land used to grow short rotation woody crops, Christmas trees, and land in orchards, groves, vineyards, berries, nurseries, and greenhouses. Land from which two or more crops were harvested was counted only once. Land in tapped maple trees was included in woodland not pastured. The 2022 census definition for harvested cropland is the same as the 2017 definition. Hay - all hay including alfalfa, and other dry. Data shown represent the acreage and quantity harvested of all types of dry hay. The quantity harvested was reported in dry tons (dry weight at the time the hay was removed from the field for storage or feeding). If two or more cuttings of dry hay were made from the same field, the acreage was reported only once as acres harvested of the appropriate dry hay category but the production from all dry hay cuttings was combined in the corresponding quantity harvested. Straw acreage and production are excluded. If dry hay was cut from the same land that haylage, grass silage, or greenchop was cut, the acreage and production for the dry hay was reported in the appropriate category of dry hay and the acreage and production for haylage, grass silage, or greenchop was reported in the appropriate haylage, grass silage, or greenchop category. For example, if 20 acres of alfalfa were cut for hay and then the same land was used to produce alfalfa haylage, 20 acres and the quantity harvested of hay were reported as Alfalfa and alfalfa mixtures for dry hay and 20 acres and the quantity harvested of alfalfa haylage were reported as Haylage or greenchop from alfalfa or alfalfa mixtures. Hay, other dry hay. Data shown represent acreage and dry tons of hay harvested from clover, fescue, lespedeza, timothy, Bermuda grass, Sudangrass, sorghum hay, and other types of legumes (excluding alfalfa) and tame grasses. Data include small grains harvested for hay including barley, oats, rye, and wheat as well as wild hay. Haylage, grass silage, and greenchop, all. Data shown represent the acreage and quantity harvested of all types (alfalfa and all other haylage, grass silage, and greenchop). The quantity harvested was reported in green tons. If two or more cuttings of haylage, grass silage, or greenchop were made from the same field, the acreage was reported as acres harvested in the appropriate haylage category only once, and the tonnage from all cuttings was combined in the corresponding quantity harvested. Straw acreage and production is excluded. Hemp. In 2022, hemp was added to the field crops and nursery sections. Hemp previously would have been reported in other nursery or field crops. Hemp was asked based on utilization of the crop. In the field crops section, four utilizations were asked: 1) hemp for fiber, 2) hemp for floral (CBD and other cannabinoid usage), 3) hemp for grain, and 4) other hemp usage. In the nursery section, three categories were asked: 1) hemp clones or transplants sold for transplant to others, 2) hemp complete grows, and 3) hemp seeds. In 2017 and prior years, hemp was included in other crops. Hired farm labor. Data are for total hired farm workers, including paid family members, by number of days worked. Data exclude contract laborers. Hired managers. A hired manager is someone who receives a wage to manage the farm operation. Up to four hired managers were reported for each farm operation. Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin. Producers of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin are found in all of the racial groups listed in the census and were tabulated according to the race reported, as well as on tables pertaining only to this group. Hogs and pigs by type of operation. Hog and pig farms were classified by primary type of operation. Operation types were farrow to wean, farrow to feeder, farrow to finish, nursery, finish only, and other. Each description was accepted and the reported inventory and sales data were assigned to each reported type. Hogs and pigs by type of producer. Hog and pig farms were classified by one type of producer. Producer types were independent grower, contractor or integrator, and contract grower (contractee). Each description was accepted and the reported inventory and sales data were assigned to each reported type. Honey collected. Data are for pounds of honey collected but not necessarily sold. See Colonies of honey bees. Income. Net cash farm income is published for the operation and producer. See Net cash farm income of the operations and Net cash farm income of the producers. Income from farm-related sources. See Total income from farm-related sources. Institutional, research, experimental, and American Indian Reservation farms. Data for these farms are combined into a single category. Research farms include farms operated by private companies as well as those operated by universities, colleges, and government organizations for the purpose of expanding agricultural knowledge. Internet access. This item is the number of farms that reported using personal computers, laptops, or mobile devices (e.g., cell phones or tablets) to access the internet. This can be done using services such as broadband, dial-up, cellular , satellite, or other methods. Involvement in decisionmaking. Questions were asked about each producer's involvement in farm-related decisions, including day-to-day decisions, land use and/or crop decisions, livestock decisions, record keeping and/or financial management, and estate planning or succession planning. Marketing decisions were added in 2022. Irrigated farms. In 2017, this item was referred to as the number of farms with irrigation. This is a wording change only; data are comparable. Irrigated land. This category includes all land watered by any artificial or controlled means, such as sprinklers, flooding, furrows or ditches, sub- irrigation, and spreader dikes. Included are supplemental, partial, and preplant irrigation. Each acre was counted only once regardless of the number of times it was irrigated or harvested. If an operation reported less than one acre irrigated, the irrigated land for the operation was rounded to one acre. Livestock lagoon wastewater distributed by sprinkler or flood systems was also included. Land area, approximate. The approximate land area represents the total land area as determined by records and calculations as of January 1, 2022. The proportion of land area in farms may exceed 100 percent because some operations have land in two or more counties, but all acres are tabulated in the principal county of operation. The approximate land area data were supplied by the U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. See Land in two or more counties. Land enrolled in crop insurance programs. The data are for all land enrolled in any Federal, private, or other crop insurance program. It includes acreage of pasture/rangeland enrolled in crop insurance programs in areas where it is provided. Land enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), Farmable Wetlands Program (FWP), or Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP). CRP is a program established by the USDA in 1985 that takes land prone to erosion out of production for 10 to 15 years and devotes it to conservation uses. In return, farmers receive an annual rental payment for carrying out approved conservation practices on the conservation acreage. The WRP, FWP, and CREP programs are included under the Conservation Reserve Program. Operations with land enrolled in the CRP, WRP, FWP, or CREP were counted as farms, given they received $1,000 or more in government payments, even if they had no sales and otherwise lacked the potential to have $1,000 or more in sales. Land in berries. Data are for total land in berries, including land on which all berry crops failed. Respondents reported bearing age acres and nonbearing acres by individual berry crops. Land in farms. The acreage designated as ''land in farms'' consists primarily of agricultural land used for crops, pasture, or grazing. It also includes woodland and wasteland not actually under cultivation or used for pasture or grazing, provided it was part of the farm producer's total operation. Large acreages of woodland or wasteland held for nonagricultural purposes were deleted from individual reports during the edit process. Land in farms includes CRP, WRP, FWP, and CREP acres. Land in farms is an operating unit concept and includes land owned and operated as well as land rented from others. Land used rent free was reported as land rented from others. All grazing land, except land used under government permits on a per-head basis, was included as ''land in farms'' provided it was part of a farm or ranch. Land under the exclusive use of a grazing association was reported by the grazing association and included as land in farms. All land in American Indian reservations used for growing crops, grazing livestock, or with the potential of grazing livestock was included as land in farms. Land in reservations not reported by reservation, individual American Indians, or non-Native Americans was reported in the name of the cooperative group that used the land. In a few instances, an entire American Indian reservation was reported as one farm. Land in orchards. This category includes land in bearing age and nonbearing age fruit trees, citrus or other groves, vineyards, and nut trees of all ages, including land on which all fruit crops failed. Respondents also reported bearing age acres and nonbearing age acres by individual fruit and nut crops. Land in two or more counties. With few exceptions, the land in each farm was tabulated as being in the producer's principal county. The principal county was defined as the one where the largest value of agricultural products was raised or produced. It was usually the county containing all or the largest proportion of the land in the farm or viewed by the respondent as his/her principal county. Reports received showing land in more than one county were separated into two or more reports if the data would substantially distort county totals. Land use practices. Includes all agricultural land used for the production of agricultural commodities. Drained by tile. Tile drainage is a practice that removes excess water from the soils subsurface. Artificially drained by ditches. A field ditch installed for surface drainage for collecting excess surface or subsurface water in a field. Conservation easement. A conservation easement is a legal agreement voluntarily entered into by a property owner and a qualified conservation organization such as a land trust or government agency. This category excludes land in CRP (Conservation Reserve Program) acres. No-till practices used. Using no-till or minimum till is a practice used for weed control and helps reduce weed seed germination by not disturbing the soil. Conservation or reduced tillage. Conserves the soil by reducing erosion and decreasing water pollution. Conservation tillage leaves 30 percent or more of the soil surface covered by crop residue after planting. Reduced tillage leaves between 15 percent and up to 30 percent of the soil surface covered. In 2017, this category was labeled reduced (conservation tillage). This is a wording change only; data are comparable. Intensive or conventional tillage. Refers to tillage operations that use standard practices which leaves less than 15 percent of the soil surface covered by crop residue. Intensive tillage often involves multiple operations with implements such as moldboard, disk, or chisel plow. In 2017, this category was labeled as intensive (conventional tillage). This is a wording change only; the data are comparable. Cover crop. A crop planted primarily to manage soil fertility, soil quality, water, weeds, pests, diseases, or wildlife. This item does not include CRP acres. Land used for vegetables. Data are for the total land used for vegetable and melon crops. The acres were reported only once, even though two or more harvests of a vegetable or more than one vegetable were harvested from the same acres. Respondents also reported harvested acres, acres harvested for fresh market, and acres harvested for processing by individual vegetable crops. Land with irrigation systems or equipment present. This was a new question in 2022. Land includes acres irrigated in 2022 and acres that were not irrigated in 2022 but could have been irrigated, regardless of water rights. Landlord's share of the total sales. Data represent the share of the operation's total sales that went to landlord(s). Layers. This category includes table-egg type layers, hatching layers for meat-types, hatching layers for table egg types, and reported bantams. Legal status for tax purposes. See Farms by legal status. Less than $1,000. See Farms with sales and government payments of less than $1,000. Livestock and poultry purchased or leased. See Total farm production expenses; Livestock and poultry purchased or leased. Longan. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, longan were reported in other non-citrus fruit. Lychees. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, lychees were reported in other non-citrus fruit. Maple syrup. Data are for the number of taps set, syrup produced, and value of sales. Market value of agricultural products sold. This category represents the gross market value before taxes and production expenses of all agricultural products sold or removed from the place in 2022, regardless of who received the payment. It is equivalent to total sales and it includes sales by the producers as well as the value of any shares received by partners, landlords, contractors, or others associated with the operation. It includes value of organic sales, direct sales and the value of commodities placed in the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) loan program. Market value of agricultural products sold does not include payments received for participation in other Federal farm programs. It does not include income from farm-related sources such as customwork and other agricultural services, or income from nonfarm sources. The value of crops sold in 2022 does not necessarily represent the sales from crops harvested in 2022. Data may include sales from crops produced in earlier years and may exclude some crops produced in 2022 but held in storage and not sold. For commodities such as sugarbeets and wool sold through a co- op that made payments in several installments, respondents were requested to report the total value received in 2022. The value of agricultural products sold was requested of all producers. If the producers failed to report this information, estimates were made based on the amount of crops harvested, livestock or poultry inventory, or number sold. Caution should be used when comparing sales in the 2022 census with sales reported in earlier censuses. Sales figures are expressed in current dollars and have not been adjusted for inflation or deflation. See Farms with sales and government payments of less than $1,000. Market value of agricultural products sold and government payments. See Total market value of agricultural products sold and government payments. Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services for livestock. This category includes fees for medical supplies, veterinary care, and custom services such as artificial insemination (AI), banding, breeding fees, caponizing, carcass removal, castrating, custom feed processing, hormone injections, performance testing, pregnancy testing, seining, sheep shearing, and other such care. This category excludes manure removal. See Total farm production expenses. Methane digesters. See Renewable energy producing systems. Migrant farm labor on farms reporting only contract labor. Data are for those operations that did not have hired farm workers but reported that they did have migrant contract workers on their operation in 2022. Migrant farm labor on farms with hired labor. Producers were asked whether any hired or contract workers were migrant workers. A migrant farm worker is a farm worker whose employment required travel that prevented the worker from returning to his/her permanent place of residence the same day. Migrant workers, total. Data are for total migrant farm workers whose employment requires travel that prevents the worker from returning to his or her permanent place of residence the same day. Military service. A producer with military service is a person who currently or previously served on active duty in the U.S. Armed Forces. For publication purposes, two categories are included in the personal characteristics tables 1) Never served or only on active duty for training in the Reserves or National Guard, 2) Active duty now or in the past. The categories in 2017 were: Never served and Served. This is a wording change only; data are comparable. Mink, live. The data are for inventory and sales of live mink. Number of farms producing mink pelts are included in livestock products. Miscellaneous poultry. Data are for poultry other than chickens or turkeys. Data are published in Chapter 2, table 20. Misreported or miscoded crops. In a few cases, data may have been reported on the wrong line, in the wrong section, or the wrong crop code may have been assigned to a write-in crop code. A few of these errors may not have been identified and corrected during processing which resulted in rare cases of inaccurately tabulated data. Reports with significant acres of unusual crops for the area were examined to minimize the possibility that they were in error. Mollusks. These are invertebrate animals with a soft body covering and shells of 1-18 parts or sections. Examples include abalones, clams, mussels, oysters, and snails. See Aquaculture. More than one race reported. This category represents producers who reported more than one race on the census form. Mulberries. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, mulberries were reported in other berries. Mushroom spawn. Respondents reported only sales; growing area was not summarized. Mushrooms. All mushroom crops were considered grown under glass or other protection and no mushroom data were published as area in the open. Those reporting mushrooms grown in the open area were converted to an equivalent area of square feet under protection proportional to their sales. NAICS. See Farms by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Net cash farm income of the operations. This concept is derived by subtracting total farm expenses from total sales, government payments, and other farm-related income. Depreciation is not used in the calculation of net cash farm income. Net cash farm income of the operation includes the value of commodities produced under production contract by the contract growers. For publication purposes, farms are divided into two categories: 1. Farms with net gains (includes those operations that broke even). 2. Farms with net losses. Net cash farm income of producers. This value is the producers' total revenue (fees for producing under a production contract, total sales not under a production contract, government payments, and farm-related income) minus total expenses paid by the producers. Net cash farm income of the producer includes the payments received for producing under a production contract and does not include value of commodities produced under production contract by the contract growers. Depreciation is not used in the calculation of net cash farm income. For publication purposes, farms are divided into two categories: 1. Farms with net gains (includes those producers that broke even). 2. Farms with net losses. New and beginning producers. It includes producers operating on any operation for 10 years or less. They may be on farms with producers who are not beginning producers. Noncitrus fruit, all. This is a summation of all acres reported in the commodities defined as noncitrus such as apples, grapes, and plums. Number of female producers. This item is the total count of female producers involved in decisions for the operation reported by the respondent. Detailed demographic data are only available for up to four producers per farm operation. Number of male producers. This item is the total count of male producers involved in decisions for the operation reported by the respondent. Detailed demographic data are only available for up to four producers per farm operation. Number of persons living in producers' households. This is the count of people living in the households of the producers on the farm. If producers on the farm are living in the same household, the count is not duplicated for each producer. Number of producers. This item is the total count of producers involved in decisions for the operation reported by the respondent. Detailed demographic data are only available for up to four producers per farm operation. Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod. Data are for total square feet under protection and acres in the open. Individual crop data were collected for area under glass or other protection, area in the open, and sales of aquatic plants, floriculture and bedding crops, nursery crops, sod, propagative materials, food crops grown under protection, and mushroom crops. Total sales data are the summation of all crops. Nursery stock crops. Data include ornamentals, shrubs, shade trees, flowering trees, evergreens, live Christmas trees, fruit and nut trees and plants, vines, palms, ornamental grasses, and bare root herbaceous perennials. Nuts, all. Data include all nut trees. Occupation. See Producer characteristics. Operation more than 50 percent owned by one producer's household and/or extended family. See Farms by type of organization. Operations legal status for tax purposes. See Farms by legal status. Oranges, all. All oranges are a summation of Valencia oranges and Other than Valencia oranges. Total acres, bearing age acres, and nonbearing age acres were collected by category. Oranges, other than Valencia - include Navel. This includes all oranges other than Valencia type. Organic agriculture. Respondents were instructed to indicate if they had organic production according to USDA's National Organic Program (NOP). Respondents reported whether their organic production was certified or exempt from certification and the sales from NOP produced commodities. They also reported whether they had acres transitioning into NOP production and the value of sales of USDA NOP certified or exempt organically produced commodities. Also see Total organic product sales. Organic fertilizer used. These are the acres of cropland or pastureland on which approved organic fertilizers were applied. Organic value of sales. See Total organic product sales. Ornamental fish. This category includes various fish raised for water gardens, aquariums, etc. Examples include angel fish, guppies, koi, ornamental goldfish, and tropical fish. The value of sales was tabulated for each specified species. Other animals and other animal products sold. This category includes number of farms and value of sales for all animals and animal products not listed elsewhere on that specific table. Other aquaculture products. This category includes aquaculture not listed separately. Examples include the production of alligators, frogs, leeches, eels, live rock, salamanders, and turtles. Other berries. This includes other berry varieties that were not pre-printed in the report form. In 2017, this category included gooseberries and mulberries which are reported separately in 2022. Data are not directly comparable. Other cattle. Data include heifers that had not calved, steers, calves, and bulls. Other cattle, sheep, livestock, or poultry. See Commodities raised and delivered under production contract. Other citrus. Data relate to any citrus crop not having a specific code on the report form. Other cropland. This includes all cropland other than harvested cropland or other pasture and grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements. It includes cropland idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement, cropland on which all crops failed or were abandoned, and cropland in summer fallow. Other crops. In Chapter 2, table 27, Other crops data relate to any field crops that did not have a specific code in the field crops section of the report form. Other crops and hay. Data are for the total market value of all crops not categorized into one of the prelisted crop sales categories on the report form. This category includes crops such as grass seed, hay and grass silage, haylage, greenchop, hops, maple syrup, mint for oil, peanuts, sugarcane, sugarbeets, etc. Other dry hay. See Hay, other dry. Other farm related income sources. See Total income from farm-related sources. Other field and grass seed crops. Data relate to any field or grass seed crop not having a specified code on the report form. Other floriculture and bedding crops. Data relate to any floriculture and bedding crops not having a specific code on the report form. Other food fish. Data are for fish, other than catfish and trout, raised on farms primarily for food. Examples include hybrid striped bass, perch, salmon, sturgeon, and tilapia. Other greenhouse vegetables and fresh cut herbs. This category includes vegetable crops, other than tomatoes, that were grown under protection and fresh cut herbs grown under protection. Other land. This category includes land in house lots, barn lots, ponds, roads, ditches, wasteland, etc. It includes those acres in the farm operation not classified as cropland, pastureland, or woodland. See Land in farms. Other livestock. This category includes all livestock not having specific codes on the 2022 report form. In addition, package bees; bees, other than honey or package bees; laboratory animals; and worms are included. See Other animals and other animal products sold. Other livestock and poultry purchased or leased. See Total farm production expenses. Other livestock products. Data for this category include the number of farms that sold livestock products that did not have a specific code on the 2022 report form. In addition, beeswax, breeding fees, embryos, fur or pelts, horns, manure sold, and semen are included in this category. Data are for farms with production, not necessarily sold. Other noncitrus fruit. Data relate to any noncitrus fruit not having a specific code on the census report form. Data are not directly comparable because several fruits were listed individually in 2022 and not included in other noncitrus item. Other nuts. This category includes any nut crop not having a specific code on the report form. Other pasture and grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements. This category includes land used only for pasture or grazing that could have been used for crops without additional improvement. Also included are acres of crops grazed by livestock, but not harvested prior to grazing. However, cropland that was pastured before or after crops were harvested in 2022 was included as harvested cropland rather than cropland for pasture or grazing. Other poultry. Data are for other poultry not having a specific code on the report form. Other spring wheat for grain. Other spring wheat for grain was sometimes referred to as spring wheat for grain. Spring wheat is consistently referred to as other spring wheat for grain. See also Wheat for grain. Other vegetables. Data shown for other vegetables relate to any vegetable not having a specific code on the census form. Patronage dividends. See Total income from farm-related sources. Parsnips. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, parsnips were reported in other vegetables. Payments received by the contractee for commodities produced under production contract. These data show the number of farms and the dollar amount the contractees received from contractors for commodities produced under contract. This is not the market value of the commodities delivered, but the payment or fee the producers received for commodities delivered. Pawpaws. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, pawpaws were reported in other non-citrus fruit. Peacocks and peahens. Peacocks and peahens were reported as other poultry. Peaches, all. Data were collected for pears as, Peaches, clingstone and Peaches, freestone, in all States including Hawaii. Pears, all. Data were collected for Pears as, Bartlett and Pears, other than Bartlett in all States including Hawaii. Peas, green. Excludes all dry peas which were collected in the field crop section. Also excluded are Chinese peas and southern peas which were reported separately. Peas, southern (cowpeas) - blackeyed, crowder, etc. Excludes dry peas which were collected in the field crops section. Pecans, all. All pecans are a summation of Pecans, improved and Pecans, native and seedling. Total acres, bearing acres, and nonbearing acres were collected by category. Pecans, improved. Improved pecans are varieties that have been genetically altered through breeding and grafting techniques to produce more nuts, and nuts with a greater percentage of nut meat. See Pecans, all. Pecans, native and seedlings. Native pecans are varieties that developed under natural conditions. Seedling pecans are produced from seed (the nut) and have not been budded or grafted. See Pecans, all. Peppers, Bell (excluding pimientos). Pimientos were reported as Other vegetables. Peppers, other than Bell (including chile). The data include all other peppers including chile. Pimientos were reported as Other vegetables. Permanent pasture and rangeland, other than cropland and woodland pastured. This land use category encompasses grazable land that does not qualify as woodland pasture or cropland pasture. It may be irrigated or dry land. In some areas, it can be a high quality pasture that could not be cropped without improvements. In other areas, it is barely able to be grazed and is only marginally better than wasteland. Plumcots, pluots, and other plum-apricot hybrids. This category includes everything that is not a plum or prune. Pluot is a registered trademark of plumcots, which are genetic crosses between plums and apricots. Potatoes. Potato acres are included in the vegetable acres. Data are for total acres harvested, acres harvested for fresh market, and acres harvested for processing. Production was not collected. Poultry hatched. This category includes all poultry hatched on the operation during the year. The number of poultry hatched is published under the sales heading. Poultry, other. See Other poultry. Precision agriculture. See Use of precision agriculture practices. Primary occupation of producer. Data on primary occupation were obtained from up to four producers per farm. The primary occupation classifications used were: 1. Farm or ranch work. The producer spent 50 percent or more of his/her worktime during 2022 farming or ranching. 2. Other. The producer spent less than 50 percent of his/her worktime during 2022 farming or ranching. Producer. The term producer designates a person who is involved in making decisions for the farm operation. Decisions may include decisions about such things as planting, harvesting, livestock management, and marketing. The producer may be the owner, a member of the owner's household, a hired manager, a tenant, a renter, or a sharecropper. If a person rents land to others or has land worked on shares by others, he/she is considered the producer only of the land which is retained for his/her own operation. The census collected information on the total number of male producers, the total number of female producers, and demographic information for up to four producers per farm. Producer characteristics. Producers (up to four producers per farm) were asked to report primary occupation, sex, age, race, if they were of Hispanic, Latino or Spanish origin, place of residence, if retired from farming, number of days worked off farm, year in which his/her operation of the farm began, year began operating any farm, if they were a hired manager, if they had military service, and the number of persons living in their households. In addition, the total number of male and female producers was collected from each operation. Producers, number. Demographic and other information were collected for up to four producers per farm. This may be fewer than the total number of producers on some farms. Production contracts. See Commodities raised and delivered under production contracts. Production expenses. See Total farm production expenses. Pullets for laying flock replacement. Data are for pullet inventory and the number sold or moved for laying flock replacement. Rabbits, live. The data are for inventory and sales of live rabbits. The number of rabbit pelts is included in Other livestock products. Race of producer. With the exception of Hawaii, data were collected for American Indian and Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander, and White producers. Respondents were asked to mark one or more of the race categories. In Hawaii producer race data were collected for American Indian (included Alaska Native), Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, Other Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian, other Pacific Islander, and White. The combination of Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander is equivalent to the Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander category on the other forms. The combination of the Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, and Other Asian categories is equivalent to the Asian category on the other forms. The Volume 1, Geographic Area Series, U.S. Summary publication only displays counts for the categories of Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander and Asian. Data for the 11 Hawaii race categories are published in chapter 2 of the Hawaii publication of the Volume 1 series. Rambutan. This is a new item for 2022. In 2017, rambutan were reported in other non-citrus fruit. Raspberries, all. In 2022, data for black, red, and other raspberries were combined and reported as raspberries, all. Data are comparable to 2017. Renewable energy producing systems. These types of systems produce power, heat, or mechanical energy by converting resources either to electricity or to motor power. Geothermal/geoexchange system. A system that uses temperatures from the earth to reduce the operational costs of heating and cooling. Methane digesters. It is a device which captures biogas resulting from the decomposition of manure, processing by-products, and other materials. Harvested biogas is used as a substitute for natural gas to power engines which generate electricity. It is fed into the natural gas pipeline or flared. Small hydro system. A water driven system, which produces electricity, by the gravitational force of falling or flowing water. It excludes water driven systems that only provide mechanical power, such as turning a grinding stone for a flour mill. Solar panels. A flat panel designed to capture the sun's energy. Includes photovoltaic systems, which convert light from the sun into electricity, and thermal systems that passively generate electricity. Wind turbines. A device which converts wind power into electricity. Includes wind generators, wind power units, wind energy converters, and aero generators. Excludes windmills, which do not produce electricity. Rental of farmland. See Total income from farm-related sources, Gross cash rent or share payments. Sales, total. See Market value of agricultural products sold. Sex of producers. This item pertains only to four producers from whom detailed demographic data were collected. Total male and female producer counts may be larger. Sheep and lambs inventory. Data are for sheep and lambs of all ages owned regardless of location. Short rotation woody crops. Data are for short rotation woody crops that grow from seed to a mature tree in 10 years or less. These are trees for use by the paper or pulp industry or as engineered wood. This does not include lumber. Acres in production were included in Cropland harvested in the Land use section of the report form. Size of farm. See Farms by size. Small hydro system. See Renewable energy producing systems. Sod harvested or intended for sale in future years. This is a new item for 2022. It replaced sod harvested to include sod in production but not harvested. Data are not comparable. Solar panel. See Renewable energy producing systems. Sport or game fish. Data are for sport or game fish raised on farms to be used primarily for sport. Examples include bluegill, crappie, largemouth bass, smallmouth bass, sunfish, muskie, northern pike, and walleye. Squash, all. All squash is a summation of summer squash and winter squash. Total acres, acres for fresh market, and acres for processing were collected by category. In 2017, the squash types were collected as separate items. Sugarcane for sugar or seed. Sugarcane for sugar and sugarcane for seed were collected separately in 2017 but were combined in 2022 and collected as sugarcane for sugar or seed. Data are not comparable. Sweet corn. Sweet corn includes sweet corn harvested for the fresh and processing markets as well as for seed. Sweet corn harvested for the fresh market includes seed grown in the open and the category is not comparable to 2017 for this category. See Vegetables harvested for fresh market. Sweet corn for seed. Sweet corn for seed is not published as a separate data item in 2022. Sweet corn for seed is in the field crop section was combined into vegetable seeds in the vegetable section. Sweet potatoes. Sweet potato acres are included in the vegetable acres. Data are for total acres harvested, acres harvested for fresh market, and acres harvested for processing. Production was not collected. Tangerines. Data include temples. Tenure. See Farms by tenure of producer. Tobacco transplants. Data are for tobacco transplants that were sold for transplant to farm fields. Transplants grown for transplanting to the same operation were not reported or removed during data review. Tomatoes in the open. Data are for tomatoes grown in the open and excludes tomatoes produced under glass or other protection. Total cropland. This category includes cropland harvested, other pasture and grazing land that could have been used for crops without additional improvements, cropland on which all crops failed or were abandoned, cropland in summer fallow, and cropland idle or used for cover crops or soil improvement but not harvested and not pastured or grazed. Total farm production expenses. Includes the production expenses provided by the producers, partners, landlords (excluding property taxes), and production contractors for the farm business in 2022. Tenant farmers reported expenses paid by landlords for the agricultural production on the operation, as well as their expenses. Farm or ranch producers who rented part of their land to others reported only the expenses for the land they actually used themselves and not expenses for land rented to others. The 2022 total farm production expenditure includes all farm-related expenses such as customwork, fuel costs, cost of cutting timber, services provided to hunters, cooperative membership fees, etc. However, if the income from these farm-related categories was not considered a part of the operation (i.e., if the income was regarded as derived from a separate business), then the associated expenses were not included. The contractor's portion of expenses was solely based on computer generated estimates for 2022. This item excludes expenses relating to non-farm activities such as trading and speculation in the commodities market or livestock trading activities. Explanations of selected production expenses are listed below. All other production expenses. All other production expenses include all expenses not listed on the report form. Examples include storage and warehousing, marketing and ginning expenses, insurance, etc. Health insurance premiums and payroll taxes are reported in hired labor expenses. Breeding livestock purchased or leased. These expenses include all breeding livestock and poultry purchased or leased during 2022 for production on the farm or ranch. The total includes amount spent for beef and dairy cows, heifers, bulls, sows, gilts, boars, rams, lambs, ewes, roosters, hens, layers, etc. Estimations of the value of livestock or poultry fed on a custom basis were to be made based on their value when they arrived on the farm or ranch. Cash rent paid in 2022 for land and buildings. These data include the cost of renting land and buildings that were part of the operation. Rent paid for the producer's dwelling or other non-farm property and the value of the shares of crops and livestock paid to landlords were excluded. Chemicals. These 2022, expenses include insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, and other pesticides, including costs of custom application. Data exclude commercial fertilizer purchased. Contract labor. These data include payments made to contractors, crew leaders, cooperatives, or any other organization hired to furnish a crew of laborers to do a job that may involve one or more agricultural operations. In some cases, a crew leader may furnish some equipment. Data exclude expenses made on a contractual basis for repair or maintenance or for capital improvements, such as construction of farm buildings, installation of fences or irrigation systems, and land leveling. Cover crop seed purchased. This expense category is a subset of total seeds, plants, vines, and trees expense. It includes the cost of all seeds, bulbs, plants, propagation materials, trees, seed treatments, seed cleaning costs, etc. for cover crops purchased during 2022. Customwork and custom hauling. These expenses include costs incurred for having customwork done on the place and for renting machines to perform agricultural operations. The cost of cotton ginning is excluded. The cost of labor involved in the customwork service is included in the customwork expense. Some examples of customwork are planting, spraying, harvesting, preparation of products for marketing, grinding and mixing feed, corn picking, grain drying, and silo filling. The cost of custom application of fertilizer and chemicals is included in expenditures for fertilizer and chemicals. The cost of hired labor for operating rented or hired machinery is included as a hired farm and ranch labor expense. Feed purchased. These expenses include the cost of all feed purchased for livestock and poultry including grain, hay, silage, mixed feeds, concentrates, etc. during 2022. Fertilizer, lime, and soil conditioners. These 2022 expenses include fertilizer, lime, rock phosphate, and gypsum and the costs of custom application. Gasolines, fuels, and oils. These expenses include the cost of all gasoline, diesel, natural gas, LP gas, motor oil, and grease products for the farm during 2022. Expenses exclude fuel for personal use of automobiles by the family and others, fuel used for cooking and heating the farmhouse, and any other use outside of farmwork on the operation. Hired farm labor. These 2022 expenses include the total amount paid for farm or ranch labor including regular workers, part-time workers, and members of the producer's family if they received payments for labor. Expenses include Social Security taxes, State taxes, unemployment tax, payment for sick leave or vacation pay, workman's compensation, insurance premiums, and pension plans. Interest paid on debts. These expenses include interest and finance charges paid in 2022 for debts secured by real estate and on debt not secured by real estate. Interest expenses excluded from this category are non-farm interest expenses and interest expenses originating from machinery and equipment used for a separate customwork business or for other operations. Interest expense for the producer's dwelling, where the amount is separate from interest on farm land and buildings on the operation, is excluded. Interest paid on debts was reported in one of two categories: 1. Secured by real estate. These data include all interest expenses paid in 2022 on debts secured by real estate for the farm. 2. Not secured by real estate. These data include all interest expenses paid in 2022 on debts secured by machinery, tractors, trucks, other equipment, livestock, poultry, breeding stock, money borrowed for use as working capital, and interest paid on CCC loans for the farm. Livestock and poultry purchased or leased. These data include Breeding livestock purchased or leased and Other livestock and poultry purchased or leased. Medical supplies, veterinary, and custom services for livestock. This category includes fees for medical supplies, veterinary care, and custom services such as artificial insemination (AI), banding, breeding fees, caponizing, carcass removal, castrating, custom feed processing, hormone injections, performance testing, pregnancy testing, seining, sheep shearing, and other such care. This category excludes manure removal. See Total farm production expenses. Other livestock and poultry purchased or leased. These expenses include all non-breeding livestock and poultry purchased or leased during 2022 for production on the farm or ranch. The total includes amounts spent for cattle, calves, hogs, pigs, sheep, hatchery eggs, etc. Property taxes paid. These data include property taxes paid by the producers for the farm share of land, machinery, buildings, and livestock, excluding taxes paid by this producer's landlords. Rent and lease expenses for machinery, equipment, and farm share of vehicles. These data include the farm share cost of renting or leasing machinery, equipment, and vehicles during 2022. Rental and lease expenses of items used only for custom hire are excluded here. Repairs, supplies, and maintenance. These expenses include all costs for the repair and upkeep of buildings, motor vehicles, fences, and farm equipment used for the farm business during 2022. Repairs to equipment used both for the farm business and for performing customwork are included. Seeds, plants, vines, and trees. These expenses include the cost of all seeds, bulbs, plants, propagation materials, trees, seed treatments, seed cleaning costs, etc. purchased during 2022. Excluded were items purchased for immediate resale or the value of seed grown on the operation. Utilities. These data show the farm share cost of electricity, telephone charges, internet fees, and water purchased in 2022. Included in the water cost is water purchased for irrigation purposes, livestock watering, etc. Household utility costs were excluded from these items. Total female producers. See Number of female producers. Total greenhouse vegetables and fresh cut herbs. This category includes greenhouse tomatoes and other greenhouse vegetables and fresh cut herbs. Total horses and ponies. See Horses and ponies value of sales. Total income from farm-related sources. This includes gross income from farm- related sources received in 2022 before taxes and expenses from the sales of farm byproducts and other sales and services closely related to the principal functions of the farm business. The data exclude income from employment or business activities, which were separate from the farm business. Agri-tourism and recreational services. This income includes income from recreational services such as hunting, fishing, farm or wine tours, hay rides, etc. Amount from State and local government agricultural program payments. This income includes State and local government agricultural program payments. Respondents were to exclude the State and local portion of Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) payments if they were reported in the amount received for participation in CREP in section 6, item 2 of the report form. Crop and livestock insurance payments received. This income includes insurance payments from crop and livestock losses. Customwork and other agricultural services. This income includes gross receipts received by the farm producers for providing services for others such as planting, plowing, spraying, and harvesting. Income from customwork and other agricultural services is generally included in the agriculture census if it is closely related to the farming operation. However, it is excluded if it constituted a separate business or was conducted from another location. Gross cash rent or share payments. This income includes gross cash or share payments received from renting out farmland, payments received from the lease or sale of allotments, and payments received for livestock pastured on a per- head, per month, or per pound basis. It excludes rental income from nonfarm property. Other farm-related income sources. This is other income which is closely related to the agricultural operation. This income includes animal boarding, breeding fees (horse breeding or stud fees received were reported in the Value of Sales section in the Other animals and other animal products category), tobacco quota buyouts, State fuel tax refunds, farm generated energy, etc. Crop and livestock insurance payments received and amount from State and local government agricultural program payments were published separately. Patronage dividends and refunds from cooperatives. This income includes payments to a farmer or rancher for business done with a cooperative to which he/she usually belongs. The payment is usually for goods sold through the co- op. Sales of forest products. This income includes gross receipts from sales of standing timber, pulpwood, firewood, etc. from the farm or ranch operation. It excludes income from nonfarm timber tracts, sawmill businesses, cultivated Christmas trees, maple products, and short rotation woody crops. Total market value of agricultural products sold and government payments. This category represents the value of products sold plus government payments. Total value of products sold combines total sales not under production contract and total sales under production contract. Government payments consist of government payments received from the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), Farmable Wetlands Program (FWP), or Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) plus government payments received from Federal programs other than the CRP, WRP, FWP, and CREP, and Commodity Credit Corporation loans. Total male producers. See Number of male producers. Total organic product sales. The data represent the value of organically produced agricultural commodities sold from operations during 2022. It includes only the value of those products that were produced as organic according to the National Organic Standards and sold by certified or exempt from certification farm operations. Total payments received. See Commodities raised and delivered under production contracts. Total producers. See Number of producers. Total sales. See Market value of agricultural products sold. Turkeys. Turkey data are a combination of turkeys for meat production, turkey hens and toms kept for breeding, and turkey brooders tabulated from three questions. Turkey brooders are immature birds sent to another farm for further growout to meat production or breeding. This may result in a turkey being sold more than once from different operations. Type of organization. See Farms by type of organization. Unpaid workers. Data include agricultural workers not on the payroll who performed activities or work on a farm or ranch. Utilities. See Total farm production expenses. Use of precision agriculture practices. This is a new item for 2022. The use of precision agricultural practices is defined as the use of practices that utilize technology to improve agricultural productivity or efficiency by connecting the practice to a digital environment for crop or livestock production. Several examples of precision agriculture practices are the use of global positioning (GPS) guidance systems, GPS yield monitoring and soil mapping, variable rate input applications, use of drones for scouting fields or monitoring livestock, electronic tagging, precision feeding, and robotic milking. Precision agriculture practices are not limited to these examples. Value of commodities. Data show the number of farms and the market value of all commodities delivered under a production contract. Value of food sold directly to consumers. Data represent the value of edible products, including value added products, produced and sold for human consumption directly to consumers at farmers markets, on-farm stores or farm stands, roadside stands or stores, u-pick, CSA (Community Supported Agriculture), online marketplaces, etc. Value of food sold directly to retail markets, institutions, and food hubs for local or regionally branded products. Data represent the value of products, including value added products, produced and sold for human consumption directly to retail markets, institutions, or food hubs for locally or regionally branded products. Examples include supermarkets, restaurants, caterers, independently owned grocery stores, food cooperatives, K-12 schools, colleges or universities, hospitals, workplace cafeterias, prisons, food banks, etc. Value of landlord's share of total sales. Data include the value of agricultural sales received by the landlords. Value of organically produced commodities. See Total organic product sales. Value of processed or value-added agricultural products sold. Data represent the value of products that originated from crop or livestock commodities produced on the operation. Through further manufacture or processing, these items are transformed into products worth more than the originally produced commodity. Value of sales. See Market value of agricultural products sold. Vegetable seeds. Include seed grown under protective cover for vegetable crops. Vegetable transplants. Data are for vegetable transplants grown and sold from the operation for transplanting to fields on another operation. Vegetables harvested for fresh market. Respondents reported the total vegetable acres harvested, harvested for fresh market, and harvested for processing. Data include vegetables harvested for seed and are not directly comparable to 2017. Vegetables harvested for sale. The acres of vegetables harvested is the summation of the acres of individual vegetables harvested. All of the individual vegetable items may not be shown. When more than one vegetable crop was harvested from the same acreage, acres were counted for each crop. Vegetables, melons, and potatoes. See Commodities raised and delivered under production contracts. Vegetables, other. See Other vegetables. Wheat for grain. Data were reported by type of wheat - Durum, winter, and other spring. Wind turbines. See Renewable energy producing systems. Woodland pastured. This category includes all woodland used for pasture or grazing during the census year. Woodland or forest land pastured under a per- head grazing permit was not counted as land in farms and, therefore, was not included in woodland pastured. Woodland, total. This category includes natural or planted woodlots or timber tracts, cutover and deforested land with young growth which has or will have value for wood products, and woodland pastured. Land covered by sagebrush or mesquite was reported as Permanent pasture and rangeland or Other land. Land planted for Christmas tree production and short rotation woody crops was reported in Cropland harvested, and land in tapped maple trees was reported as Woodland not pastured. Write-in crops. The respondent was asked to look at a list of crops in each section of the report form and write in the crop name and its code for all commodities produced. For crops that had no individual code listed on the report form, the respondent was to write in the crop name and code of the appropriate ''all other'' category for that section. Write-in crops coded as ''all other'' were reviewed and assigned a specific code when possible. Crops not assigned a specific code were left in the appropriate ''all other'' category. Years operating any farm. This number is based on the year each producer began operating any farm operation. Young producers. A young producer is defined as a producer 34 years of age or younger. This is a definition change from 2017. Young producers in 2017 included producers 35 years of age or younger. The data are not comparable.