(Silage, even thou nerfed in fs17, may still be the exception to this rule.)īTW, the one thing my original posts do not take into account is that you can get straw from barley/wheat, this can make them a bit more profitable. I think you will do better than focusing on one crop and continually "tanking" its price due to over delivery. I think you are better off diversifying, at least a much as is affordable, and selling each crop when it hits a high price. Those that have the 'periodic plowing' feature enabled, will need to check the map for if your field needs ploughing. For corn and sunflower seeds, this isn't any different. (The only crop that needs a significant amount of seeds is potatoes and even it is offset by the sheer volume in the harvest.) Field preparation Ensuring that your soil is healthy and ready to be used is a vital part of farming. So I think this post is focusing on the wrong thing. The actual cost of seeds is such a small percentage of revenue that even if one crop takes double the seed of the other, it does not make much difference in profit per hectare. With price fluctuations, they are pretty much the same.) but if one bag costs $500, then profit per hectare would be $9500 on crop 1 and $9000 on crop 2 - so profit/ha is more important than profit/bag. (i.e if crop 1 takes 1 bag/hectare and crop 2 takes 2 bag/hectare and they both make $10,000/hectare, well the profit per bag would be $10000/bag on crop 1 and $5000/bag on crop 2. This post is somewhat deceptive because it talks about "total profit per bag of seeds", which is different than profit per acre/hectare. I think your likely talking about this post:
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