u/GrantHarvester1

planting season is humbling every single year and I don't think that ever goes away

planting season is humbling every single year and I don't think that ever goes away

Not sure how everyone else’s season went by, but this year kicked my ass.

There was never a window to get all the corn and beans in and weeds are already emerging before our crop.

I’ve heard Nebraska and Kansas are not going well either

u/GrantHarvester1 — 7 hours ago

the grants/funding posts in here always miss a few things that actually matter

not trying to be that guy but every time someone asks about money for their small farm operation it's the same reply chain. SARE. talk to your extension office. good luck.

I've spent way too many hours on the USDA websites and sitting in county FSA offices trying to figure this stuff out for our own place. some of it surprised me. figured I'd share since I never see it come up here.

the FSA beginning farmer loan is more accessible than people think

most people assume they don't qualify. the thing is, eligibility is calculated at the individual operator level, not the farm entity. so if you're a younger operator working within a bigger family situation — maybe the family has a lot of acres, maybe it looks large on paper — your personal numbers might still clear the bar.1.5% fixed. covers up to 45% of the purchase price. I know people who called their county FSA office fully expecting to get laughed out of there and walked out with a loan that beat anything a bank would've touched.

worth a call before you assume no.

the microloan thing is real and almost nobody talks about it

up to $50k. shorter application than a standard FSA loan, fewer hoops. it's specifically built for operations that don't look like what a local bank wants to see, which is most small farms.

if you've been told no by a lender or haven't even tried because you figured it was pointless — this is the one to look at.

VAPG. seriously. look it up.

Value-Added Producer Grant. up to $250k. actual grant, not a loan, not cost-share. USDA Rural Development runs it.

if you do anything with what you grow beyond selling it raw — jams, syrup, fiber, cut flowers, meat under your own label, cheese, anything — you're potentially eligible. the application isn't fast, I won't lie about that. but the competition is way lower than you'd expect because most people in small farm communities have never heard of it. talked to someone last year who got funded and said there were barely any other applicants in their state.

EQIP has a whole separate track for organic transition that pays more

if you're working toward organic certification, there's a specific organic transition payment schedule within EQIP that runs at higher per-acre rates than the conventional side. and it's available during the transition years — when the money pressure is actually worst — not just after you're already certified.

you have to ask about it specifically. if you just ask about EQIP you'll get the standard overview and probably never hear about the transition rates

state programs almost always stack with federal ones

every state has its own beginning farmer or small farm programs and they're designed to run alongside federal stuff, not instead of it. most people have never called their state dept of agriculture to ask. that call takes 15 minutes and can meaningfully change what's available to you.

anyway. happy to answer questions if any of this is useful. I'm not an expert and I'd tell you to verify everything with your county office — but I've been through enough of it that I can probably help someone figure out where to start.

reddit.com
u/GrantHarvester1 — 2 days ago